Skip to main content

Full text of "A Collection of letters illustrative of the progress of science in England, from the reign of Queen Elizabeth to that of Charles the Second"

See other formats


| 


| 


ll 


| 


| 


I 


| 


N 
-) 
O NN 
2 NN 
—==(0 
~ ™ 
be =) 
-) 


i 


ii 
a 


il 


3 


“o> 


\ 


mole 
eo 
iA 


" 

“eee 

ww Bere 
+, os 


Digitized by the Internet Archive 
in 2007 with funding from 
Microsoft Corporation 


va http:/www.archive.org/details/collectionoflettOOhistuoft 


oS ae 
ee a 
Pil Wi 


b 


f 
i 
(ial 
i 


ase 


oe 
= 


ge 


Se ee 
: . a 


ae 


=k 


LETTERS 


SS 
- 


Pd 


ON 


¥ 


& 


rt 


Ho 
Dat 
Ain + 


4 


N 
ae 
— 
& 
a 
=) 
— 
= 
— 
fo) 
nD 
= 
iv=) 
Co 
= 
i) 
=i 
© 


A 
ry 
2 
S 


q " 
- ti 
es 4 
e ory 
= ‘ 7 
, at 
ts er rt ‘e 
iy) ant es 
i e oe 
Phe a 
aa ~ Al “a 
Asi" . = + J 
Ge _ ee 
“s : € <3 
i 
reel 
= < 
o 


.| 
, 


‘ - 
2 j t. 
5 @ 7 a # 4 
_ ii * 


i; ¥. ye 


“T am fully perswaded that our countrie is not inferiour to any for men 
knowledge, singular explication, and exquisite execution of the artes 1 
ticke, for what strangers may be compared with M. The E 
countryman, the great master of archmastrie ? and for theoretical speculat 


most cunning calculation, M. Dee and M. Thomas Heriotts are hardly dy 
‘s ie. 


ma‘ched.”—The Seaman’s Secrets, by John Davis, 1594. 7 


Historical Society of Setence. 


A 


COLLECTION OF LETTERS 


ILLUSTRATIVE OF THE PROGRESS 


OF 


SCIENCE IN ENGLAND 


FROM THE REIGN OF 


QUEEN ELIZABETH TO THAT OF CHARLES THE SECOND. 


EDITED BY . Pel Ifpps 


JAMES ORCHARD HALLIWELL, _Esa., F.R.S., 
F.S.A., F.R.A.S., &c. &c. &c. 


LONDON: 
PRINTED FOR THE SOCIETY, 
BY R. AND J. E. TAYLOR, RED LION COURT, FLEET ‘STREET. 
M.DCCC.XLI. 


THE 


HISTORICAL SOCIETY OF SCIENCE. 


1840-41. 


PRESIDENT. 


HIS ROYAL HIGHNESS THE DUKE OF SUSSEX, 
K.G., K.T., G.C.H., D.C.L., F.R.S., &e., &e., &¢c., &e. 


VICE-PRESIDENTS. 


THE RIGHT HON. THE EARL OF MUNSTER, F.R.S. 
THE RIGHT HON. LORD HOLLAND, F.R:S. 

THE RIGHT REV. THE LORD BISHOP OF DURHAM, F.R.S. 
SIR ROBERT HARRY INGLIS, BART., M.P., LL.D., F.R.S. 
SIR GEORGE T. STAUNTON, BART., M.P., D.C.L., F.R.S. 
THE RIGHT HON. SIR LANCELOT SHADWELL, V.C. 


COUNCIL. 


CHARLES PURTON COOPER, ESQ. Q.C., D.C.L., F.R.S., F.S.A. 

THOMAS STEPHENS DAVIES, ESQ. F.R.S. L. & E., F.S.A. = Pro- 
fessor of Mathematics at the Royal Military Academy, Woolwich. 

AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN, ESQ. V.P.R.A.S. Professor of Mathematics 
at University College, London. 

JAMES ORCHARD HALLIWELL, ESQ. F.R.S., F.S.A. Sec. & Treas. 

REV. JOSEPH HUNTER. F-.S.A., F.R.A.S. 

SIR FRANCIS PALGRAVE, K.H., F.R.S. 

THOMAS JOSEPH PETTIGREW, ESQ. F.R.S., F.S.A., F.L.S. 

~REV. BADEN POWELL, M.A., F.R.S. Savilian Professor of Geometry, 
Oxford. 

SIR J. GARDNER WILKINSON, F.R.S., M.R.S.L., F.G.S. 

REV. ROBERT WILLIS, M.A., F.R.S. Jacksonian Professor of Natural 
and Experimental Philosophy, Cambridge. 

THOMAS WRIGHT, ESQ. M.A., F.S.A. 

JAMES YATES, ESQ. M.A., F.R.S., F.G.S. 


ts aba ea , ape 


ge pik! 


sa ey “ ‘ 


eon, F 


- 


OI 
eR fy 
’ ou 
“is 


7 Bins fe fyi. 


‘ ee ns AN, a 
dy Paty 5) Lapham er a aac 
ee a O6 cl AE 


PREFACE. 


‘T'ue contents of the present volume are so very 
miscellaneous, that it would be a difficult task to 
give a satisfactory analysis of them within the limits 
of a few pages. Perhaps it may be sufficient to state 
that the Editor has endeavoured to form such a collec- 
tion of early letters on scientific subjects as would be 
likely to assist any future author of a critical history 
of English science, and that from the very limited 
number of such letters which now remain he has at- 
tempted a selection which he thinks will be consi- 
dered a valuable addition to the few materials of this 
class already published. ‘The libraries of the British 
Museum, Sion College, Lambeth, and Oxford have 
been found to contain documents suitable for this 
purpose, and the reader will find that the following 
volume includes letters from all these depositaries. 
To the cursory reader any illustration of the pro- 
gress of science in this country during the reign of 
Elizabeth will be a novelty ; and even those who have 
paid more particular attention to the subject will, we 
think, be surprised to find scientific correspondence 


Vill PREFACE. 


of so early a date still preserved. Thanks to the 
venerable Lord Burghley, a few fragments are still 
preserved, which, though often individually of no 
great importance, are very curious illustrations of 
the state of English science at that period. For 
instance, the letter of Emery Molineux to Lord 
Burghley, printed at p. 37, is in itself of little in- 
terest or value; but. when joined with the fact that 
it is the only known memorial respecting one who 
was distinguished as the first mathematical instru- 
ment-maker* of his day, it becomes a document at 
once curious and valuable, and well worthy of pre- 
servation in an available form. 

Before the publication of a very able and interest- 
ing paper on the early English mathematical and 
astronomical writers in the Companion to the British 
Almanac for 1837, written by Professor De Morgan, 
nothing had been attempted towards even a connected 
sketch of the scientific labours of our countrymen 
during the latter half of the sixteenth century. ‘‘ Far 
from having,” says Professor De Morgan, ‘‘ such a 
work as those of Montucla or Delambre in our lan- 
guage, we have not even a chronological compendium 
like that of Weidler, Heilbronner, or Gerard Vossius.”’ 
But necessarily imperfect in its details as Prof. de Mor- 
gan’s sketch is, yet it may fairly rank with its conti- 
nental companions, and gives, we may safely say, a 


* Davis, in the Seaman’s Secrets, 4to. Lond. 1594, bestows the 
like praise upon him. According to Maunsel’s Catalogue he was 
the author of a treatise on the use of the globes, but I have never 
been fortunate enough to meet with a copy. 


PREFACE. iX 


correct and impartial account of almost every work 
that holds any importance either among the discove- 
ries or mere elementary assistances of science. If we 
add to this, three articles in the Magazine of Popular 
Science, by the Editor of this volume, we shall have 
enumerated, we believe, every published contribution 
to the subject. It may, however, be mentioned, that 
Mr. Hunter discovered that John Field and John 
Dee adopted the Copernican system as early as 1556 ; 
and Professor De Morgan has shown that Robert 
Recorde was-a convert to the heliocentric theory at 
nearly the same period. But these discoveries seem 
to have attracted little attention from scientific men, 
either on account of that lamentable apathy towards 
matters of history which is too frequently character- 
istic of the lover of demonstration, or perhaps, jet us 
hope, from a want of some general channel of com- 
munication, such as the Historical Society of Science 
now affords. 

The letters of Sir Charles Cavendish, which are, 
with two or three exceptions, now published for the 
first time, will, we think, enable the reader to form a 
tolerably correct idea of the extent to which the study 


IS of analytical science was then carried in England. If 


we give a glance at the state of this branch of science 
a short time anterior to that period, we shall be rather 
at a loss to account for the number and success of its 
English cultivators, who seem to have arisen on a 
sudden and at the same time with efforts sufficient to 
produce works equalling, if not surpassing, those of 
their continental neighbours. 


X PREFACE. 


Robert Recorde may be considered as the founder of 


analytical science in England. The author of the — 


first English work on algebra (1557) has not, how- 
ever, as might have been expected, produced a mere 
elementary compilation, but a work that ranks, for 
originality and depth, with the ablest foreign contem- 
porary productions on the same subject. What is 
rather inexplicable, this book by Recorde appears an 
oasis in a century deficient in this science, and no 
Englishman is known to have pursued the study of 
algebra to an equal extent before the time of Harriot. 
With the exception of a trifling essay by Thomas 
~ Digges in the Stratioticos, and a few memoranda in a 
MS. of Blagrave’s in Lambeth Palace*, we scarcely 
know of anything connected with this branch of 
science that is worthy of notice, and even these in- 
clude only the simplest elementary principles. 

It is somewhat remarkable that this dearth of ana- 
lytical science was not the result of a prejudice in 
favour of the geometry of the ancients. We have, 
it is true, an elaborate edition of Euelid by Dee and 
Billingsley, but with this the taste for geometry ap- 
pears to have expired. We do not find that Harriot 
and the contemporary English analysts were fettered 
by a prejudice in favour of the old geometry, such as 
for a length of time pervaded the writers of the con- 
tinent ; although, indeed, it appears from Harriot’s 

* This is No. 280, which is classed anonymously in the printed 
catalogue. Blagrave has given in this volume the well-known al- 
gebraic question relating to the cocks of a cistern, besides several 


astronomical notes. It appears that Blagrave studied under John 
Field, whom we have mentioned above. 


ne 


PREFACE. xl 


_ papers in the British Museum that he was well ac- 
quainted with Pappus and other geometrical works 
which had then been recently published abroad. 
There is a remarkable note of Sir Charles Cavendish 
at p. 84, who says, ‘‘ Dr. Jungius prefers the analitics 
of the ancients before Vieta’s by letters, which he saies 
is more subject to errors or mistakes, though more 
facile and quick of dispatch, but I conceive not yet 
whye.’’ This serves to show that the roro¢ avadvowevos 
of the Alexandrian school still held its sway in the 
minds of foreign mathematicians, notwithstanding the 
writings of Vieta and Descartes ; but we find no traces 
in this country of its influence over the new analysis 
before the time of Robert Simson, that is, nearly a 
century afterwards. 

The science of the seventeenth century possessed 
one feature which is now obsolete, and which pro- 
bably contributed, in a great measure, to preserve 
and foster a taste for analytics. We allude to the 
practice of publicly proposing problems for solution 
—a kind of challenge from individuals to the science 
of all KEurope—and thus exciting an emulation which, 
perhaps, would otherwise not have been felt. The 
superiority of the new analysis over the ancient geo- 
metry was soon acknowledged, and although. some 
questions were required to be solved geometrically, 
yet mathematicians soon evinced their dislike to a 
system of attaining by a long and tedious method 
that which was often capable of speedy and easy re- 
solution by another analysis. Specimens of these 
challenges are preserved among Pell’s papers in the 


Xi PREFACE. 


British Museum, printed on narrow. slips of paper, 
and evidently intended to be pasted pro bono publico 
in conspicuous situations. We have little doubt that 
the celebrated problem, generally known as Colonel 
Titus’s problem, was originally proposed in this man- 
ner. We have already intimated that this problem 
is attributed to the wrong person*, and we have since 
discovered a note in MS. Birch, 4411, which ex- 
pressly states that it was ‘‘ put by Colonel Titus, who 
had received it from Dr. Pell.”” The problem in the 
most general form is as follows: 


a? + be=a(l) 
b? + ac = B (2) > to find a, b, and c. 
+ 0b =y GB) 


Collins has given a solution which occupies four- 
teen closely written folio pages, and the more modern 
solutions have not been comprised in a much shorter 
compass. ' Wallis’s solution is in the same manu- 
script. Pell, however, criticises Collins’s solution 
very severely, and ridicules him for not observing 
that the roots will admit both of positive and nega- 
tive values. 

The problem is generally given with numerical va- 
lues for «, 8, and y, and the only possible chance of 
a short solution is a case in which these numbers 
bear some definite relation to each other, so as to ob- 
tain an equation independent of the given quantities. 
For instance, Pell gives one wherein « = 15, 8 = 16, 


* Life of Sir Samuel Morland, p. 28.— From No. 4413, fol. 24, 
it appears that the problem generally ascribed to Colonel Titus was 


proposed to Pell in 1649 by William Brereton, who very probably 
had it from Harriot.” 


PREFACE. Xiil 


y = 17, in which case the problem remains in the 
same position as before with regard to a solution ; 
but it is singular that Pell’s ingenuity should not 
have suggested another method of solution in the 
case which he gives wherea=7,B=7, y=11. In 
this case we have 

avt+be=+ac 

a2? — b? =ac—bec=c(a— d) 

or,a+b=c. 

It is unnecessary to pursue this any further, for by 
substituting this value of ¢ in (3) and (2), and add- 
ing the two equations together, we obtain 2 (a+)? 
= 18,orc=3. The values of a and bd are | and 2 
respectively, and this is, perhaps, the simplest case 
which could be selected. 

To return to the contents of our volume. The 
notes of inventions of Ralph Rabbards at p. 7, may 
be noticed as somewhat similar to the far-famed 
“Century of Inventions” of the Marquis of Wor- 
cester. The number of such proposals is great, and 
several seem to include discoveries generally consi- 
dered as belonging to a more modern period*. The 
letter of Tycho Brahe, at p. 32, may be mentioned 
as a curious notice of the intercourse between the 
mathematicians of this and foreign countries. The 
letters of Thomas Lydyat are more valuable for bio- 


* For instance, Sir Samuel Morland’s Tuba Stentorophonica may 
have been anticipated by Henry Reginald, who, in the year 1603, 
dedicated a book of inventions to King James, among which was 
one “‘to convey the voice for a thousand paces without showing any 
one near you were talking.” —MS. Birch, 4384. 


XIV PREFACE. 


graphy than the history of science ; and yet we think 
that they will be acceptable to the lover of familiar 
history. Similar remarks may be made of others*. © 

In the appendix to Dr. Vaughan’s ‘‘ Protectorate 
of Oliver Cromwell,” are printed several letters from 
Pell’s MS. collections, a few of which we have found 
it necessary to reprint in this work. Unfortunately 
no references whatever are given to the places whence 
these letters are taken, and amidst the very numerous 
volumes which compose Pell’s collections, it is no 
easy matter to find the deposit of any particular one. 
Owing to this arrangement, we have been quite un- 
able, although we have spared no exertions, to find the 
original of a very curious letter which Dr. Vaughan 
has printed at p. 347. It is written by Dr. Pell, and 


dated Oct. 12th, 1642; and we are unwilling to 


neglect the opportunity of extracting the following 
passage :— 


“T can hear of nothing of Vieta’s in manuscript in England, 
but such pieces of his as are already printed, and were trans- 
cribed for the most part out of the printed books, because 
they could not be had for money. Here is also'a manuscript 
of his note priores ad logisticen speciosam, transcribed many 
years ago at Paris out of a written copy; but since that time, 
le Sieur de Beaugrand hath caused it to be printed in 24mo. 
at Paris, anno 1631, with a few notes of his own thereon. It 


* We have neglected to say in the proper place (p. 31), that “a 
copie of the speache made by the mathematicall lecturer unto the 
worshipfull company present, at the house of the worshipfull Mr. 
Thomas Smith,” was published at London in 1588, small 4to. From 
the title-page to his treatise on the Cross-staf, it appears that Hood 
was mathematical lecturer in 1596; but in his work on the Sector, 
published in 1598, this title is omitted. We also omitted to remark, 
that from MS. Harl. 7523, fol. 206, it appears that Pell in 1650 had 
a design of publishing commentaries on the works of Descartes. 


PREFACE. XV 


_ is true I have in mine own hands an imperfect astronomical 
manuscript of six sheets of paper, entitled Hypothesis Fran- 
- celidinis, said to be a piece of a great work of Vieta’s, called 


by him Harmonicum Celeste, which may, perhaps, be found 


complete in France, whence mine came. I have been told 
here that the Englishman that, at the time of Vieta’s death, 
served him as a scribe, under the counterfeit name of John 
Poltrier, being kindly offered by Vieta’s heirs to take what he 
pleased to keep as a remembrance of him, took not a leaf of 
any of his writings. And Thuanus tells us that the heirs did 
ut all his papers in the hands of Peter Alelmus of Orleans. 
never enquired whether this Peter were the father to Jaco- 
bus Alelmus, the French king’s engineer; from whom, four- 
teen years after Vieta’s death, Alexander Anderson acknow- 
ledgeth that he had those two tracts, de equationum recogni- 
tione et emendatione, which he first published at Paris, anno 
1615. And though it is likely that Monsieur Aleaume (for 
so I think the French call him) be now dead, yet I hope a 
diligent enquirer may learn who was his heir, and what is 
become of Vieta’s Adversaria.” 
We consider this a most important testimony in 
favour of Nathaniel Torporley, who, according to 
_ Anthony a Wood, attacked Vieta under the name 
_ of Poultry. We now see the truth through Wood’s 
 mistake,—a mistake that has puzzled Professor Ri- 
gaud and other writers on the scientific history of this 
period. Perhaps Poltrier may be a mistake for Pol- 
troyer, and intended for an anagram of the name of 
Torporley. This letter is also curious for the men- 
tion of Vieta’s Harmonicon Celeste, which has been 
but recently discovered, and is now in the course of 
publication at Paris by M. Libri. 

We cannot conclude these few memoranda without 
offering our respectful thanks to His Grace the 
Archbishop of Canterbury, who, with the greatest 
liberality, has afforded us every facility for consulting 


the manuscripts in the library at Lambeth Palace. 


XVl PREFACE. 


silat 


The Historical Society of Science is indebted to 
J. H. C. Wright, Esq., of St. John’s College, Cam- 
bridge, for the transcripts of several of the letters 
contained in this volume, which were most kindly 
presented to the Society by that gentleman, whose 
zeal and knowledge of science and its history are de- 
serving of the highest praise. 


J. O. HALLIWELL. 


sn ee ee 


35, Alfred Place, Jan. 15, 1841. 


No. 
— TF 


4. 


CONTENTS. 


POPPA 


Richard Eden to Lord Burghley, Aug. 1st, 1562 


. Thomas Digges to Lord Burghley, May 14th, 1574 
- Ralph Rabbards to Queen Elizabeth, 1574 


Dr. John Dee to Lord Burghley, Oct. 3rd, 1574 
Humphrey Cole to Lord Burghley, Dec. 4th, 1578 . 


. Instructions by Dr. John Dee, May 15th, 1580 . 
. Stephen Powle to Mr. West >... « 2 + 2 © 


Lord Burghley’s memorial concerning Dr. John Dee’s opi- 
nion on the reformation of the calendar. . . .. . 


. Thomas Hood to Lord Burghley. . . 

. Tycho Brahe to Thomas Savelle, Dec. Ist, 1590 

. John Bulkeley to Thomas Harriot, Feb. 28th, 1591. 

. Edmund Jentill to Lord Burghley, Oct. Ist, 1594 

- Inventions by Edmund Jentill . : ‘ 

- Henry Marshall to Lord Burghley, June 101 1595 . 

. Emery Molineux to Lord Burghley, 1596. . . .. . 
. William Lower to Thomas Harriot, March 4th, 1611 . 

. The same to the same, April 13th, 1611. 

. The same to the same, July 19th, 1611 . 

. Thomas Aylesburie to Thomas Harriot, April 15th, 1613. 
. John Rudston to Thomas Harriot, June 9th, 1615 . 

. Thomas Aylesburie to Thomas Harriot, Jan. 19th, 1619 . 
- Thomas Harriot to the Duke of Northumberland, June 13th, 


1619 


- Samuel Turner to Thomas Harriot . ; ’ 
. Henry Briggs to Thomas Lydyat, July 11th, 1623 . 


b 


Page 


XVill CONTENTS. 
No. Page 
25. Thomas Lydyat to Henry Briggs, July 4th, 1623 . . . 47 
26. Thomas Man to Thomas Lydyat, April 19th, 1625. . . 49 
27. Thomas Lydyat to Thomas Man, May 12th, 1625 . . . 50 
28. Thomas Lydyat to Sir Henry Martin, Oct. 17th, 1626 . 54 
29. Henry Briggs to John Pell, Oct. 25th, 1628 . . . . . 55 
30. Thomas Lydyat to Henry Briggs, Oct. 31st, 1628 . . . 58 
31. A paper on the weight of water by the Duke of Northum- 

bervland ©)... aes - 59 
32. Christopher Potter to William Boswell, Mar. sth, 1632 . 26 
33. Thomas Lydyat to William Boswell, April 4th, 1632 . . 61 
34. Thomas Lydyat’s petition to Charles the First . . . . 63 
35. Thomas Lydyat to the Archbishop of Canterbury . . . 64 
36. Walter Warner to Robert Payne, Oct. 17th, 1634 . . . 65 
37. Robert Payne to Walter Warner, June 2lst,1635 . . . 2. 
38. Sir Charles Cavendish to Walter Warner, May 2nd, 1636. 66 
39. The same to the same, Sept. 2nd, 1636. . . . . . - 67 
40. Robert Payne to Walter Warner, Oct. 3d, 1636. . . . %@. 
41. Thomas Lydyat to Mr. Rouse, Aug. 2nd, 1638 . . . . 70 
42. Nathaniel Torporley to the Duke of Northumberland, 

July 5th, 1632... . tence, ee 
43. Sir Charles Cavendish to John | Pell, dia fie 1641.6) 446 TZ 
44. The same to the same, Feb. 5th, 1641 . . . . . . . @. 
45. The same to the same, June 26th, 1641. . . . . .- 73 
46. The same to the same, July 24th, 1641... . . . . @. 
47. The same to the same, Nov. 20th, 164]. . : EP rs at 
48. The same to the same, Dec. 18th, 1660. (4 ,2%.. wie 
49. Robert Pink to Thomas Lydyat, Nov. 13th, 1641 . . « 75 
50. Sir Charles Cavendish to John Pell, Jan. 20th, 1644 . . 76 
51. The same to the same, Jan. 31st, 1644... . « . + 0. 
52. The same to the same, March 26th, 1644 . . . . .°s 77 
53. The same to the same, July 26th, 1644... . «. . » 78 
54. The same to the same, Aug. 18th, 1644 . .. .. - 79 
55. John Pell to Sir Charles Cavendish, Aug. 7th, 1644 . . ib. 
56. Sir William Petty to John Pell, Aug. 14th, 1644. . . . 81 
- 57. Sir Charles Cavendish to John Pell, Aug. 26th, 1644 . . 83 


| No. 
im 58. 
+59. 
60. 
= 61. 
62. 
63. 
64. 
65. 
66. 
= 67. 
«68. 
| 69. 
70. 
71. 
72. 
73. 
74. 
75. 


CONTENTS. xix 


Sir Charles Cavendish to John Pell . . . « «© « es 84, 
The same to the same, Oct. 20th, 1644... . . . . 85 
The same to the same, Nov. 16th, 1644 . . .. . . 86 
The same to the same, Dec. 20th, 1644 . . . «. «© « @&. 
The same to the same, Dec. 27th, 1644 . . . . . + 87 
The same to the same, June 27th, 1645 RB = site rd 
John Pell to John Leake, Aug. 7th, 1645. . . . . «. 89 
Sir William Petty to John Pell, Nov. 8th, 1645... . 90 . 
Henry Power to Sir Thomas Browne, June 13th, 1646 . QI » 
The same to the same, Feb. 10th, 1647... ... =. 9 
William Oughtred to Mr. Greatorix, Dec. 19th, 1652 . . 93> 
H. Thorndike to John Pell, Dec. 23rd, 1652. . . . . 94 
List of Mr. Warner’s papers . . . PRR ies | os 
Anthony Thompson to John Pell, Nov. oond, 1658. « . @. 
Pell’s relation of a meeting with Hobbes, March 31st, 1662 96 - 
Thomas Brancker to John Pell, May 9th, 1666 « . .°. 97 
The same to the same, June 21st, 1666. . .... . 98 
The same to the same, July 6th, 1666 . .. . ine oo 


. Christopher Sawtell to William Lilly, Aug. 6th, 1666 . . 101° 
. Thomas Brancker to John Pell, Aug. 17th, 1666 . . . 102 
. John Pell to Moses Pit, June 3rd, 1668 ... . « 103 
. Henry Oldenburgh to Lord Brereton, Sept. 22nd, 1668 . 104 ~ 
. Michael Dary to John Collins, Feb. 8th, 1675 . . . . 105 
- Note on solving equations by John Pell, May 20th, 1675. 76. 
. John Collins to Mr. Oldenburgh, May 25th, 1675 . . . 106 
. Sir Samuel Morland to John Pell, May"13th, 1682. . . 107 
SeeRICTGER BBs o's “eee nag. 6 <6) ee 6 be” © « 109 


THE 


HISTORICAL SOCIETY 


OF 


SCIENCE. 


The object of the Historical Society of Science is to render mate- 
_ rials for the history of the Sciences accessible to the general reader, by 
_ the publication of manuscripts, or the reprinting of very rare works 
connected with their origin and progress in this country and abroad. 


. The plan adopted for carrying this purpose into effect is by an an- 
nual subscription of One Pound from each Member, such Member being 
_ entitled to one copy of each of the works published by the Society. 


The number of Members is limited to Six Hundred, and, until this 
. __ limit is attained, Members are admitted on the introduction of one of 
_ the Council, or by application to the Secretary. 


All Communications relative to the Society to be addressed to the 


+ 
ving wept Hise a bo ret 
\ . « ‘ “ - I 


yma 


THE 


HISTORICAL SOCIETY 


OF 


SCIENCE. 


PRESIDENT. 


HIS ROYAL HIGHNESS THE DUKE OF SUSSEX, 
K.G., K.T., G.C.H., D.C.L., F.R.S., &c., &c., &c., &e. 


VICE-PRESIDENTS. 


THE RIGHT HON. THE EARL OF MUNSTER, F.R.S. 
THE RIGHT HON. LORD HOLLAND, F.R.S. 

THE RIGHT REV. THE LORD BISHOP OF DURHAM, F.R.S. 
SIR ROBERT HARRY INGLIS, BART., M.P., LL.D., F.R.S. 
SIR GEORGE T. STAUNTON, BART., M.P., D.C.L., F.R.S. 


| THE RIGHT HON. SIR LANCELOT SHADWELL, V.C. 


COUNCIL, 1840-41. 


CHARLES PURTON COOPER, ESQ. Q.C., D.C.L., F.R.S., F.S.A. 

THOMAS STEPHENS DAVIES, ESQ. F.R.S. L. & E., F.S.A.  Pro- 
fessor of Mathematics at the Royal Military Academy, Woolwich. 

AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN, ESQ. V.P.R.A.S. Professor of Mathematics 
at University College, London. 

JAMES ORCHARD HALLIWELL, ESQ. F.R.S., F.S.A. Sec. & Treas. 

REV. JOSEPH HUNTER, F.S.A., F.R.A.S. 

SIR FRANCIS PALGRAVE, K.H., F.R.S. 

THOMAS JOSEPH PETTIGREW, ESQ. F.R.S., F.S.A., F.L.S. 

REV. BADEN POWELL, M.A., F.R.S. Savilian Professor of Geometry, 
Oxford. 

SIR J. GARDNER WILKINSON, F.R.S., M.R.S.L., F.G.S. 

REV. ROBERT WILLIS, M.A., F.R.S. Jacksonian Professor of Natural 
and Experimental Philosophy, Cambridge. 

THOMAS WRIGHT, ESQ. M.A., F.S.A. 

JAMES YATES, ESQ. M.A., F.R.S., F.G.S. 


LAWS 


OF THE 


HISTORICAL SOCIETY OF SCIENCE. 


1. That the Society shall be entitled the “‘ HISTORICAL SOCIETY 
OF SCIENCE.” 


2. That the object of the Society shall be the printing of early 
and other documents illustrative of the history of the sciences at 
home and abroad. 


3. That the Society shall consist of six hundred Members, being 
subscribers of One Pound annually; such subscription to be paid in 
advance on or before the first Monday in June in every year. 


4, Toat any Member of the Society may at any time compound 
for his future annual subscriptions, by the payment of £10 over and — 
above his subscription for the current year. 


5. That the affairs of the Society shall be managed by a President, 
six Vice-Presidents, and a Council of twelve Members, (nine of whom 
shall be re-eligible) including a Treasurer and Secretary, which Council 
shall be elected at the General Meeting to be held on the first Monday 
in June. 


6. That the accompts of the receipts and expenditure of the Society 
shall be audited annually by three Auditors, to be elected at the General 
Meeting. 

7. That the funds of the Society shall be disbursed in payment of 
necessary expenses incident to the production of the Works of the 
Society, and that all other expenses shall be avoided as much as 
possible. 


8. That every Member not in arrear of his annual subscription, 
shall be entitled to one copy of each work printed by the Society. 


WORKS IN THE PRESS. 


I. Popular treatises on science of the middle-ages :—1. The Anglo- 
_ Saxon manual of astronomy, 2. The Bestiary and Tractatus de Creaturis 
_ of Philip de Thaun, in Anglo-Norman verse. 3. The Ymage du 
My Monde, by Gautier de Metz, in French verse. 4. A cosmography in 
_ English verse of the 14th century. Edited with translations by Thomas 
Wright, Esq., M.A., F.S.A. : 


II. A collection of letters written by Harriot, Brereton, Cavendish, 
Pell, Morland, and other eminent English mathematicians of the seven- 
teenth century, before the publication of Newton’s Principia. Edited 
_ by James Orchard Halliwell, Esq., F.R.S., F.S.A., F.R.A.S., &c. 


WORKS SUGGESTED FOR PUBLICATION. 


III. Treatises on Geometry written in England during the 13th and 
14th centuries ; including an hitherto inedited treatise on that subject, 
by Roger Bacon. 


IV. Treatises on the theory and practice of music, of the fifteenth 
_ century. From a MS. in the Lansdowne collection in the British 
~ Museum. 


V. An English treatise on Algorism, or Arithmetic, of the fourteenth 
century. From a MS. in the Ashmolean Museum at Oxford. 


VI. The preface to the Seventh Book of the Mathematical Collec- 
tions of Pappus Alexandrinus, in the original language; with an 
English translation, and explanatory notes. 


VII. An English tract on the making of oils and medicinal waters, 
from a MS. of the fourteenth century. 


VIII. Proposals for mechanical inventions addressed to Queen 
Elizabeth by William Bourne, ‘“ Master of the Gravesend Barge.” 
From a MS. in the British Museum. 


IX. A catalogue of the scientific manuscripts formerly in the library 
of Dr. John Dee of Mortlake. From Dee’s own catalogue in the 
British Museum. 


= 


— se 


4: 


X. A collection of early tracts on the method of illuminating, and 
on the materials employed in that art. 


XI. A collection of early tracts on the practice of lithotrity. 


XII. Anglo-Saxon tracts of the tenth century on Botany and Natu- 
ral History, with an account in Anglo-Saxon of the wonders of the 
East ; together with some middle-age treatises on the same subjects, 
and a selection of figures of animals and plants from early manuscripts. 
To be edited with translations. 


XIII. An original journal of Edward Fenton’s voyage to St. Helena 
in the year 1582, interspersed with scientific observations and notices 


of English science. 


XIV. A description of the Merva, a mechanical instrument invented 
by Simon Sturtevant of Christ’s College, Cambridge; from the auto- 
graph manuscript dedicated by the inventor to James I. To which — 
will be added biographical notices of Sturtevant, and several hitherto 
inedited letters and documents. a 


XV. A collection of early tide tables, including a series made by 
John Marshall, temp. Elizabeth. 


The following list of the names of English medited writers is taken 
from the Synopsis Veterum Mathematicorum of Dr. Bernard, as being 
that of the authors which it was his intention to publish. This list 
will receive the marked attention of the Council, as the suggestion of 
one of the ablest of mathematical antiquaries. 


Athelard, Bede, Bredon, Suisset, Wallingford, Bradwardin, Peckham, 
Lynne, Swinshed, Monke, Grosteste, Rede, Wyrcestre, Evesham, 
Ashenden, Batecomb, Killingworth, Caerleon, Holywood, Bacon, 
Burroughs, Chylmead. 


Gentlemen wishing to join the Society are requested to send their names 
received at the Society’s bankers. 


to the Secretary, 35 Alfred Place, Bedford Square, London. Subscriptions 


BaNnkERS.—Messrs. Cocks, Bipputpy and Bippuupu, 43 Charing-Cross. 


MEMBERS. 


HIS ROYAL HIGHNESS THE DUKE OF SUSSEX, 
K.G., K.T., G.C.H., D.C.L., F.R.S., &c., &e., &c., &c., President. 


ALLEN, Joun, Esq. 

Annesley, James, Esq., F.R.S., F.S.A. 

Arden, Joseph, Esq. 

Atkinson, William, Esq., Weaste Lodge, near Manchester. 
Attwood, Benjamin, Esq. 

Aungier, George James, Esq. 

Baily, Francis, Esq., D.C.L., V.P.R.S., V.P.R.A.S., Hon. M.R.LA., F.L.S., 
F.G.S., Member of the French Institute. 

Bartlett, James, Esq., Blandford. 

Bell, John, Esq., Gateshead. 

Bernard, Charles Edward, Esq., C. E., Cardiff. 

Bickersteth, Robert, Esq., Liverpool. 

Birmingham Public Library. 

Bishop, George, Esq., Treas. R.A.S. 

Black, William Henry, Esq. 

Bosworth, Rev. Joseph, LL.D., F.R.S., F.S.A., M.R.S.L., English Chaplain at 
Rotterdam. 

Botfield, Beriah, Esq., M.P., M.A., F.R.S., F.S.A., F.R.A.S., M.R.S.L. 
Bright, Benjamin Heywood, Esq. 

Bromhead, Sir Edward F., Bart., M.A., F.R.S.L. & E., F.R.A.S. 
Brown, Samuel Cowper, Esq., F.S.A., Shillingford Cross, Devon. 
Browne, Edward Henry, Esq. 

Browne, William Meredith, Esq. 

Bruce, John, Esq., F.S.A., Treasurer.of the Camden Society. 
Cabbell, Benjamin Bond, Esq., F.R.S., F.S.A., V.P.R.1., M.R.S.L. 
Cahusac, J. A., Esq., F.S.A. 

Cartwright, Samuel, Esq., F.S.A., F.G.S. 

Chappell, William, Esq., F.S.A. 

Charles, $., Esq., Trinity College, Cambridge. 

Chasles, M., Member of the French Institute. 

Colborne, William, Esq., Chippenham. 

Cook, Gordon, Esq. 


6 


Cooper, Charles Purton, Esq., Q.C., D.C.L., F.R.S., F.S.A., Hon. M.R.LA., 
M.R.S.L., M.R.A.S. 

Copland, James, M.D., F.R.S. 

Corney, Bolton, Esq. 

Cottenham, the Right Hon. Lord, Lord High Chancellor of Great Britain. 

Cramer, Rev. John Anthony, D.D., Public Orator in the University of Oxford, 
and Principal of New-Inn-Hall. . 

Crichton, Sir Alexander, Grand Cross of St. Anne and St. Vladimir, M.D., 
F.R.S., F.L.S., F.G.S. 

Cull, Richard, Esq. 

Cureton, Rev. William, M.A., F.R.S., F.S.A., Keeper of the Oriental Manuscripts 
in the British Museum. 

Davies, Thomas Stephens, Esq., F.R.S.L. & E., F.S.A., Professor of Mathematics 
at the Royal Military Academy, Woolwich. 

Deck, Norris, Esq. 

Dell, Thomas, Esq., Aylesbury. 

De Morgan, Augustus, Esq., V.P.R.A.S., Professor of Mathematics at University 
College, London. 

Diamond, Hugh W., Esq., F.S.A. 

Diamond, John Ross, Esq. 

Dodd, George, Esq., F.S.A. 

Dowling, William, Esq. 

Drake, Thomas, Esq. 

Durham, Right Rey. Edward, Lord Bishop of, D.D., F.R.S., F.S.A., Vicz-Pre- 
SIDENT. 

Exley, Rev. Thomas, M.A., Bristol. 

Faraday, Michael, Esq., D.C.L., F.R.S., Hon. M.R.S.E., F.G.S., Member of the 
French Institute, and Fullerian Professor of Chemistry at the Royal In- 
stitution. 

Fletcher, Thomas William, Esq., F.R.S., F.S.A., Dudley, Worcestershire. 

Frewen, John, Esq. 

Frewen, Thomas, Esq. 

Gaskin, Rev. Thomas, M.A., F.R.S., F.R.A.S., Fellow and Tutor of Jesus 
College, Cambridge. 

Gilbert, Ralph George, Esq. 

Godwin, George, Jun., Esq., F.R.S., F.S.A. 

Griffith, John, Esq., B.A., St. John’s College, Cambridge. 

Grundy, John, Esq. " 

Guest, Edwin, Esq., M.A., F.R.S., Fellow of Caius College, Cambridge. 

Gurney, Hudson, Esq., F.R.S., V.P.S.A., M.R.S.L. 

Hall, Charles, Esq. 

Hallam, Henry, Esq., M.A., F.R.S., V.P.S.A., F.G.S., F.R.A.S., V.P.R.S.L., Trust. 
Brit. Mus. and Member of the French Institute. 

Halliwell, James Orchard, Esq., F.R.S., F.S.A.L. & E., F.R.A.S., M.R.S.L., 
English Correspondent of the French Historical Committee of Sciences, 
Sec. & Treas. 

Halliwell, Richard, Esq., F.S.A. 

Halliwell, Rev. Thomas, M.A. 


a 
‘ 


Harding, E. T., Esq., Librarian to the King of Hanover. 

Hardy, Peter, Esq., F.R.S. 

Heywood, James, Esq., F.R.S., F.S.A., V.P.S.S. 

Hind, the Rey. John, M.A., F.R.A.S., F.C.P.S., Cambridge. 

Holland, Henry Richard Vassal Lord, F.R.S., F.S.A. Vice-PrestpEent. 

Hollier, Richard, Esq., F.S.A. 

Hunter, Evan Haynes, Esq., B.A. 

Hunter, Rev. Joseph, F.S.A., F.R.A.S., Assistant Keeper of Her Majesty’s 
Records. 

Huxley, George K., Esq. 

Inglis, Sir Robert Harry, Bart., M.P., LL.D., F.R.S., F.S.A., F.R.A.S., Trust. 
Brit. Mus., Vice-PresipEnt. 

Irving, David, Esq., LL.D., Advocates’ Librarian, Edinburgh. 

Irving, John, Esq., Bristol. 

Jerdan, William, Esq., F.S.A., M.R.S.L. 

Jessep, Joseph George, Esq. 

Johnson, Manuel, Esq., M.A., F.R.A.S., Radcliffe Observer, Oxford. 

Johnston, E., Esq. 

Jones, Rev. H. Longuevile, M.A., Paris. 

Jones, Rev. John, M.A., Bardd Tegid. 

Kater, Edward, Esq., F.R.S. 

K6nig, Charles, Esq., K.H., F.R.S., Hon. M.R.1.A., F.L.S. 

Langdale, Right Hon. Lord, Master of the Rolls. 

Lawson, Andrew, Esq., Boroughbridge. 

Lee, John, LL.D., F.R.S., F.S.A., F.R.A.S. 

Lewis, H. R., Esq. 

Libri, M., Member of the French Institute. 

Lillington, Alfred, Esq., Southwold. 

Lincoln Permanent Library, the. 

Lloyd, Rev. Humphrey, M.A., F.R.S., V.P.R.L.A., Fellow of Trinity College, 
and Professor of Natural Philosophy in the University of Dublin. 

Lockwood, Joseph D’Alby, Esq. 

Logan, Rev. H. F. C., Professor of Mathematics in the College of St. Mary, 
Oscott. 

Lovelace, the Right Hon. the Earl of. 

Mackenzie, John W., Esq., W. S., Edinburgh. 

Madden, Sir Frederick, K.H., F.R.S., F.S.A., Hon. M.R.LA., Keeper of the 
Manuscripts in the British Museum. 

Maitland, Rev. S. R., F.R.S., Librarian to the Archbishop of Canterbury. 

Meyrick, Sir Samuel Rush, K.H-, LL.D., F.S.A. 

Montrose Antiquarian Society. 

Moore, Thomas, Esq., F.S.A. 

Munster, George Earl of, F.R.S., F.S.A., V.P.R.A.S., M.R.S.L., Member of the 
French Institute. Vicr-PRESIDENT. 

Myers, Sir F. Waskett, K.C.S. 

Northampton, The Most Noble Spencer Joshua, Marquis of, President of the 
Royal Society, Trust. Brit. Mus., D.C.L., F.S.A., Hon. M.R.LA., F.G.S. 

Nichols, John. Gough, Esq., F.S.A. 


Nurse, William Mountford, Esq. 

Page, Peter, Esq., East.Sheen. 

Palgrave, Sir Francis, K.H., F.R.S., Deputy Keeper of Her Majesty’s Records. 

Paris, Bibliothéque du Roi. 

Peacock, The Very Rev. George, D.D., Dean of Ely, V.P.R.S., F.G.S., Lown. | ft 
dean Professor of Astronomy, Cambridge. 

Petit, Louis Hayes, Esq., M.A., F.R.S., F.S.A., F.L.S., F.R.A.S., V.P.R.S.L. 

Pettigrew, Thomas Joseph, Esq., F.R.S., F.S.A., F.L.S. 

Pettigrew, W. V., Esq., M.D. 

Phillipps, Sir Thomas, Bart., M.A., F.R.S., F.S.A., F.G.8., Hon. M.R.S.L. 

Platt, Thomas Joshua, Esq., Q.C. 

Pocock, Charles Innes, Esq., Bristol. 

Polson, Archer, Esq. 

Powell, Rev. Baden, M.A., F.R.S., F.R.A.S., Savilian iiedane of Geometry, 
Oxford. 

Prothero, Thomas, Esq. 

Rainy, Alexander, Esq. 

Read, John, Esq., Derwent Hall, Sheffield. 

Reece, Richard, Esq., F.S.A., Cardiff. 

Richards, John, Jun., Esq., F.S.A. 

Rigaud, Gibbes, Esq. 

Rigaud, John, Esq., Magdalen College, Oxford. 

Rigaud Rev. Stephen Jordan, B.A., F.R.A.S., Fellow of Exeter College, Oxford. 

Rimbault, E. F., Esq., Secretary of the Percy Society. 

Roberton, John David, Esq., Assist. Sec. R.S. 

Robinson, George, Esq. 

Robinson, John, Esq., Chiswick. 

Rokewode, John Gage, Esq., F.R.S., Director §.A., F.L.S. 

Rutherford, William, Esq., F.R.A.S., Professor of Mathematics at the Royal Mili- 
tary Academy, Woolwich. 

Savory, Thomas Field, Esq., F.S.A. 

Shadwell, Right Hon. Sir Lancelot, M.A., Vice-Chancellor of England. Vicx- 
PRESIDENT. 

Shipp, William, Esq. 

Smeeton, George, Esq. 

Smith, Aquilla, M.D., M.R.LA. 

Smith, Rev. John James, M.A., Fellow and Tutor of Caius College, Cambridge. 

Smith, Rev. John Pye, D.D., F.R.S. 

Smith, William, Esq. 

Smyth, William Henry, Esq., Capt. R.N., K.S.F., F.R.S., F.S.A., Hon. M.R.LA., 
For. Sec. R.A.S., Member of the French Institute, Cardiffe 

Snow, John Pennell, Esq., Trinity College, Cambridge. 

Sotheby, S. Leigh, Esq. 

Stapleton, Thomas, Esq., F.S.A. 

Staunton, J., Esq., M.D., Talton, Worcestershire. 

Staunton, Sir George Thomas, Bart., M.P., D.C.L., F.R.S., F.S.A., V.P.R. Asiat. S., 
Hon. M.R.S.L., F.L.S. Vicr-PresipEnt. 

Stephens, Archibald John, Esq., M.A., F.R.S., F.Z.S. 


Stokes, George, Esq., Colchester. 

Swanston, Clement Tudway, Esq., Q.C., F.R.S., F.S.A. 

Sylvester, James Joseph, Esq., F.R.S., F.R.A.S., Professor of Natural Philo- 
sophy and Astronomy at University College, London. 

Taylor, Richard, Esq., F.S.A., F.L.S., F.G.S., F.R.A.S. 

Tharp, John, Esq., Chippenham Park, Cambridgeshire. 

Thomson, F. Hale, Esq. 

Thornhill, Walter, Esq. 

Todd, Rev. J. H., D.D., M.R.L.A., Fellow of Trinity College, Dublin. 

Townsend, Rev. George, Prebendary of Durham. 

Turner, Dawson, Esq., F.R.S., F.S.A., Hon. M.R.LA., F.L.S., M.R.S.L. 

Turner, John, Esq. 

Turner, Thomas Hudson, Esq. 

Tyssen, John Robert Daniel, Esq., F.S.A., Hackney. 

Vallé, Frederick, Esq. 

Walker, John, Esq., Cornhill, Northumberland. 

Warwick, W. A., Esq. 

Way, Albert, Esq., F.S.A. 

Weightman, Hugh, Esq., B.A. 

Weyer, His Excellency M. Van de, Belgian Minister. 

Whatman, James, Esq. 

Wilkinson, Sir J. Gardner, F.R.S., Hon. M.R.S.L., F.G.S. 

Williamson, Rev. E. R., M.A., Hon. Sec. to the Bedfordshire General Library. 

Willis, Rev. Robert, M.A., F.R.S., F.G.S., Jacksonian Professor of Natural 
and Experimental Philosophy, Cambridge. 

Wright, Edwin W., Esq. 

Wright, J. H. C., Esq. 

Wright, Thomas, Esq., M.A., F.S.A. 

Wynter, Rev. Philip, D.D., President of St. John’s College, Oxford. 

Wynter, Rev. James Cecil, M.A., Gatton, Surrey. 

Yates, James, Esq., M.A., F.R.S., F.G.S. 

Yates, Joseph B., Esq., F.S.A. 


PRINTED BY RICHARD AND JOHN E. TAYLOR, 
RED LION COURT, FLEET STREET. 


ty rahe Tv 


i “isk hi td ‘nie 
wipe oO ti 


setae 
t Ay 
"7 
J 
: f 
, ‘ 
ch 
js 
r: 
- 
td 
s is 
4 
. € 
ug f 
"1 
Li 
7 
n 
] 
— 
* 
ih 
‘ a 
rT , + 
= 3 é m * Coe 
| hel ote ah dy) ‘ 
te o ie 4 ‘ 
4 
“tee 
aoe 
wi BA , 
% 


LETTERS ON SCIENTIFIC SUBJECTS. 


RICHARD EDEN TO LORD BURGHLEY. 


[MS. Lansd. No. 101. Art. 5. Orig.] 
August Ist, 1562. 

THE only searcher of mens harts, the eternall God, I take 
to wytnesse (right honorable) that never the greefes of 
adverse fortune (wherof I have had my parte) dyd so muche 
prostrate my mynde and pearce my harte with sorowes, as 
the understondinge of your honours favour and goodnesse 
towarde me in your lately ernest travaile in my behalfe (as I 
was informed by the Mr? of Savie) hathe rejoised me and re- 
vived my discouragied spirites, heretofore no lesse languysshed 
for lacke of suche a patrone, then nowe encouraged by the 
fayoure of suche a Mecenas, as I have just cause to’ name 
‘your honoure. Syth only the respecte of suche vertues as it 
hathe pleased yow to thinke commendable in me, hath moved 
a honour not only in maner to seeme carefull for me howe 
maye hereafter with quietnesse spende my tyme in studie, 
as is my most desire; but also to be more ernest in folow- 
ing the same, then I might without presumption demaunde, 
and muche lesse without desertes dequire. As touchinge the 
- which matter (right honourable) as it was no parte of my divise, 
_ but suche as the M* of Savoy had then in hande, as I sup- 
pose no lesse to pleasure hymselfe and his frende then for 
£20 therof to be lotted to me for an earnest penye to begyne 
_ the booke (as he saith). Even so am I right sorie that for 
so smaule a matter, and not so favorable a sute as I wolde 
have wysshed, not only your honour hathe taken suche 
_ paynes, but that also suche contention is rysen therof be- 
_ twene the M* of Savoy and Mr’ Baptist of the privie chamber, 
that by reason thereof the pardon being steyed be your Ho- 
nour, the younge gentleman his kynsman (as he hathe in- 
formed me) is in daungiour of his lyfe. But under your 

B 


ir, i 
al Z 


2 LETTERS ON SCIENTIFIC SUBJECTS. 


honours favour to speake playnelye as I thinke, I suppose 
that here aliquid latet quod non apparet. For as this sute, 
for dyvers consyderations, at the first dyd not greatly like 
me, yet perceavinge his ernestnesse therein, for the safe- 
garde of his kinsmans life and gratifying his frendes, I, no 
lesse willing therin to do hym pleasure, also was well con- 
tented to assent to his request, and to stande to his appoynt- 
ment; not suspecting his frendeshippe, but rather commend- 
ing his wysdome, so to doo for his frende as therwith not to 
forget hym selfe, guia nihil sapit qui sibi non sapit. But if at 
that tyme I might so boldelye have presumed uppon your 
honours favour, as by your ernestnesse in my behalfe I nowe 
perceave I might have doune, I wolde have moved your 
Honour of an honester sute (for a lease to be had at the 
Queenes hands) whereof I made hym privie, and was longe 
sense so mynded to have donne, but that he deterred me 
frome the same, alleaging certen commissionars to have the 
doinges therof, and that therfore no suche thing might be 
had at her Majesties handes: albeit, I have sythens harde 
of dyvers that have obteyned the like. Notwithstonding (as 
in my former letters I wrotte to your honour) my meaning is 
so to move your honour hereof, as neyther to be an impor- 
tunate suter, or otherwise to thinke the same to be folowed 
then shall seeme good unto your honour, unto whose will I 
submitte myselfe in all thinges; only putting your honour 
in remembruance of the commodious place and tyme that I 
nowe enjoye for that purpose: for the contynuance wherof, I 
was a suter unto your Honour for your letters unto the gen- 
tleman (my frende) in whose house I yet remayne, who also 
being one that favoureth learninge and my greate frende, and 
no lesse gladde to further so good a purpose, is well willing 
the rather to my use to departe frome a piece of his commo- 
ditie, in suche sorte as appeareth by the byll herein inclosed. 
Whereof further to advertyse your honour, if you shall so 
thinke it convenient, he will himselfe repayre unto your ho- 
nour to give you perfecte informacion of alle thinges as 
touching the same. And wheras the M* of Savoye tolde me 
that your honour sumwhat doubted that the booke coulde 
not be translated into the Englisshe toonge, I assure your 
honour that this I dare saye without arrogancie, that to 
translate the variable historie of Plinie into our toonge, I 
wolde be ashamed to borowe so muche of the Latine as he 
dothe of the Greke ; althowgh the Latine toonge be accompted 
ryche, and the Englysshe indigent and barbarous, as it hathe 
byn in tyme past muche more then it nowe is, before it was 
enriched and amplyfied by sundry bookes in maner of all 


i. LETTERS ON SCIENTIFIC SUBJECTS. 3 
artes translated owt of Latine and other toonges into En- 
_gilysshe. And it is not unknowen unto your Honour that 
the Latins receaving bothe the science of philosophie and 
_ phisike of the Grekes, do still for the most parte in all ther 
_ translacions use the Greke names, insomuche that, for the 
_ better understonding of them, one Otto Brumfelsius, a learned 
_ man, hathe writen a large booke intiteled, Onomasticon Medi- 
cine, where he hathe these woordes, Res ipsas atque artium 

vocabula, scite, apposite, designateque efferre, atque ad Poly- 

cleti regulam (quod aiunt) exprimere, res est non minus difficilis — 

quam gloriosa. Quo, nullum studit genus majori constat mo- 

lestia. Id quod in causa esse reor, quia hodie tam pauci in ea 
palestra sese exerceant, &c. Agen, it is not unknowen unto 
| +d honour that ons all toonges were barbarous and needie, 
| before the knowleage of things browght in plentie of woordes 
} and names; wherby it maye well appeare that men, in the 
first age of the worlde, had a shorte language consistinge of 
fewe woordes, which ever after increased by the knowleage 
and invention of thinges. Exercise also maketh suche 
woordes familier, which at the first were difficulte to be un- 
derstode ; for children at the first (as saithe Aristotle) caule 
all men fathers; but shortely after by exercise caule them by 
there names. AndIhave learned by experience that the mary- 
ners use manye Englysse woordes, which were as unknowen 
unto me as the Chaldean toonge before [ was conversant with 
them. It maye therefore suffice that the woordes and termes 
of artes and sciences be knowen to the professours therof. as 
partely by experience and partely by the helpe of dictionaries 
describing them per proprium genus et differentiam, as the 
logitians teache, and as Georgius Agricola useth to do in the 
Germayne toonge, which, as well in that parte of philosophie 
as in all other, was barbarous and indigent before it was by 
longe experience browght to perfection. But not to trouble 
your honour any longer with this matter, one thinge re- 
mayneth wherof I wolde gladlye have certified your honour 
at my last being at the courte at Grenewich, if I might have 
had convenient accesse unto yow; And this is, that, per- 
ceavinge your honour to take pleasure in the wonderfull 
woorkes of arte and nature (wherin doubtlesse shyneth the 
sparke of the divine spirite that God hathe gyven you) I was 
then mynded to have delyvered unto your honour this phi- 
losophicall booke, wherin is described (as appeareth in folio 
ij.) so excellent and precious an experiment, wrought by arte 
to the similitude of the universall frame of the worlde, made 
by the omnipotent and greate God of nature, that I beleve 
the like was never doonne synse the creacion of the worlde. 

B2 


4 LETTERS ON SCIENTIFIC SUBJECTS. 


And maye therfore in my judgement more woorthely be 


a 


cauled Michrocosmos, then eyther man or any other creature — 


that ever was made of corporall substance. Angelus Poli- | 


tianus in his epistells describeth an instrument cauled auto- 
maton made in his tyme in the citie of Florence, observing 
the exacte moving of Primum Mobile and Octava Sphera, 
with also the movinges of the 7 planetes in there spheres, in 
all poyntes agreable to there moving in the heaven. Of the 
like instrument also our Roger Bacon wrotte longe before in 
his booke de Mirabili potestate artis et nature*, where he 


writeth in this maner, Afajus omnium figurationum et rerum — 


figuratarum est, ut celestia describerentur secundum suas lon- 


gitudines et latitudines in figura corporali, qua moventur cor- — 
poraliter motu diurno, et hec valere(n|t regnum |unum] ho- — 


mini sapienti, &c. The which instrument doubtlesse, all- 
thowgh it be of a divine invention, yet dothe this Michrocos- 
mos so far surmount it, as nature passeth arte, and as motus 
animalis passeth motus violentus, for as the other is moved 
only by waight or wynde inclosed (as is seene in clockes and 
organs) so is this moved by the same spirite of life, wherby 


not only the heaven, but also all nature, is moved: whose — 


mover is God hymselfe, as saithe St. Paule, Ipsus est in quo 


vivimus, movemur, et sumus; as also Aristotle, Plato, and — 
Philo, in there bookes De Mundo, do affirme; and especially — 
Marcus Manilius in Astronomicis ad Augustum Czesarem, | 


writing thus: 
Hoc opus immensi constructum corpore mundi, 
Membraque nature diversa condita forma, 
Aéris atque ignis terre pelagique jacentis, 
Vis anime divina regit ; sacroque meatu 
Conspirat Deus, et tacita ratione gubernat,t &c. 

Item Lucanus: 

Aere libratum vacuo que sustinet orbem, 
Totius pars magna Jovis f. 


And wheras the autoure that describeth the Michrocosmos — 
affirmeth that the Chaos therof is materia Lapidis Philoso- 


phorum (which is also Chaos, vel omnium, vel prima materia 


mundi majoris) it seemeth to agre with that Cornelius Agrippa ~ 
hathe written in his seconde booke De occulta philosophia, in — 
scala unitatis, where he wryteth thus: Lapis philosophorum — 
est unum subjectum et instrumentum omnium virtutum natura-_ 


lium et transnaturalium, &c. And that this greate and divine 


secreate of this Michrocosmos maye not seeme incredible unto — 


* Edit. 1542, fol. 43, v°. 
+ Manilii Astronomicon, lib. i. 1. 247-251. 
¢ Lucani Pharsalia, lib. v. 1. 94-95. 


LETTERS ON SCIENTIFIC SUBJECTS. 5 


_ your honour, [ assure you that I, that am minimus philoso- 
_ phorum, dyd long sense (as I have to wytnesse Mr. Thomas 
Whalley, th’ elder soonne of Mr, Richard Whalley) woorke 
and secreate practise sumwhat like unto this, in maner as 
foloweth* :—I dissolved two substances in two waters; then 
I put the waters togyther in a glasse, suffering them so to 
remayne foratyme. Then I stilled of the water from the 
masse or chaos lefte of them bothe, and put it on agen, and 
so dyd dyvers tymes. In fine, the masse being dissolved in 
the water, I let it rest all night in a coulde place. In the © 
morning, | founde swymming on the water and in the myddest 
therof a little round iland, as brode as riall or sumwhat more, 
with at the least a hundreth sylver trees about an ynche high, 
so perfectly formed with trunkes, stalkes and leaves, all of 
most pure and glystering sylver, that I suppose no lymner 
or paynter is able to counterfecte the like. Then shaking 
the glasse, all fell in pieces into the water, and filled it with 
glystering sparkes, as the firmament shyneth with starres in 
a cleare wynter night. Then putting the glasse to a softe fyre 
uppon warme asshes, all turned agen into clear water, which, 
agen being put in a colde place all night, made an iland with 
the like trees as before. What this wolde have been in fine, 
God knoweth, and not I! But of this I am sure, that if the 
floure or learning of our tyme, and sumtyme tutor and bro- 
ther-in-lawe unto your honour, Mr. Cheeke, had seene any 
of these two secreates, he wolde greatly have rejoysed. As I 
knowe the divine sparke of knowleage that is in your honour, 
partely receaved of hym, will move yow to doo the like, sythe, 
to a philosophicall and vertuous man, there is nothing so de- 
lectable as to beholde the infinite poure and wisdome of God 
in his creatures, in the which his Deitie is not only visible, 
but in maner palpable, as sum philosophers have written. 
And as touching these matters, I have red a marvelous sen- 
tence in an olde written booke, where these woordes are 
written: Qui potest facere mediam naturam, potest creare 
mundos novos. But to discourse of this oracle, or to inter- 
prete the same, it were to muche to molest your honour 
therwith: and an argument muche meeter for a seconde So- 
crates then for me. And of these secreates, writeth Roger 
Bacon in his booke before alleaged, where he hathe these 
woordes; Multa sunt archana admiranda in operibus artis et 
nature: Que licet multam utilitatem non habeant (habent vero 


* Cf. Morieni Romani de re metallica librum, 4to, Par. 1564, p. 30, et Chrysippi 
Faniani de arte metallic metamorphoseos librum, 4to, Par. 1560, p.17. See also 
Ripley’s ““ Compound of Alchemy,” where may be seen an account of a process very 
Similar to that mentioned by Eden. 


6 LETTERS ON SCIENTIFIC SUBJECTS. 


maximum ut sapientibus cognitum est) tamen spectaculum in- 
effabile sapientie prebent et possunt applicari ad probationem 
omnium occultorum quibus vulgus inexpertum contradicit, et 
judicat fieri per opera demoniorum, &c. 

And thus most humbly desyring your Honour to pardon 
my boldnesse in writing unto you; and, according unto your 
accustomed clemencie, to accept in good parte this my pre- 
sumptuous attempte, which only the love I beare to your 
vertues hathe moved me unto, my trust is that these thinges 
shall not be alltogyther unpleasaunt unto your honour, other- 
wyse occupied in greate affayres bothe in the courte and 
common wealthe, as was Plato with King Dyonisius, Ari- 
stotle with greate Alexander, and Cicero Senator and Consul 
of Rome. 

The eternall God and immortall mover of the greate worlde 
and the lesse, preserve your Honour in healthe and prospe- 
ritie | 

From the Folde bysyde Barnet, the first of August 1562. 

Most bownde to your honour, 
RicHarRvDE Epen*. 


THOMAS DIGGES TO LORD BURGHLEYf. 
[MS. Lansd. No. 19, Art. 30. Orig.] 


14th May, 1574. 


Right Honorable,—As in your Lordshippes fframe astro- 
nomicall, for ornament the figures of the most notable con- 
stellations in this our visible hemisphere are pourtrayd, 
adourned with ther due number of hevenly lights; so, in 
the tables adjoyninge, are impressed sutche numbers as de- — 
liver by methode not vulgare the situations and habite which — 


* Richard Eden was a philosopher of good repute in his time. He translated 
into English, treatises on navigation by Cortes and Taisner, the former of which — 
was exceedingly popular and went through several editions. He is also the author 
of a very curious little book entitled, ‘‘ A Treatyse of the newe India,” 1553, 8vo. — 
At the end of this letter he adds the following sentences in Latin:—1. “‘ Tue D. 
addictus, alios non quero penates.” 2. ‘In secretis et occultis, secretus et occultus 
esto.” This lattter quotation is from Hippocrates. 

+ Thomas Digges ranks among the first English mathematicians of the sixteenth | 
century. Although he made no great addition to science, yet his writings tended — 
more to its cultivation in this country, during the reign of Elizabeth, than, per- — 
haps, all those of other writers on the same subjects put together. The work he 
alludes to in this letter, if a printed one, is probably an edition of his father’s 
work, entitled “ Prognostication Everlasting,’”’ one of which was published in 1574 | 
and contains an addition by himself. 


LETTERS ON SCIENTIFIC SUBJECTS. 7 


_ our moovable horizon and meridian, together with ther ma- 

nifold configurations, with the twoo cheefe lights. Where- 
_ upon sundry conclusions, both pleasant for varietye of know- 

ledge and necessary ffor common use, are grounded. Wherof 
I have in 50 conclusions digested the greater part, with ther 
historyes poeticall, and judgementes astronomicalle; the 
which, into a little treatize reduced, I am bould to offer unto 
your Lordship, hopinge, ere it bee longe, to ffinishe a columne 
sustayninge a regular body platonicall, garnished with solar 
dialls, sutche as I thinke hitherto in this land hath not beene: 
seene, to bee placed in soome of your Lordshipps gardeyns, 
as aptly serving for uses diurnall as that other frame for con- 

clusions doon by night; whose archetype was longe sithens 
in mind conceyved, and have now at the last also attayned 
the hand of an hable woorkman to exsequute the same in 
ffoorme materiall. In the meane, I shall humbly desire your 
Lordshipp in good part to accept this triflinge testimony of 
a carefull mind desirouse soom waye to signifye the reverent 
affection I have and shall duringe life beare toward you, no 
lesse for private then publike respectes ; Always, as becoometh 
mee, restinge, 


At your Lordshippes commandment, 
T. Dieces. 
To the right Honorable my Lord Burghley, 
the Lord highe tresurer of England, these. 


RALPH RABBARDS TO QUEEN ELIZABETH. 


[MS. Lansd. No. 121. Art. 14.] 


A coppie of notes delivered to her Majestie by Raphe 
Rabbards*. 


Speciall breife remembrances of such moste pleasante ser- 
viceable and rare inventions as I have, by longe studdie and 
chardgeable practice, founde out, the whiche I holde my- 
selfe bounde in dutie to offer with this learned worke unto your 
Majestie, as the firste fruites of my labor: the which, or any 
parte thereof, I shal be reddy to performe and put in execu- 
_ tion, at as smalle chardge and to as greate purpose as any 
other ingeniors or practitioners of Christendome, when it 
_ Shall please your sacred Majestie to commaunde me, not he- 
_ therto performed by any before my selfe. 

* Ralph Rabbards is not a name that has much relation with the history of the 


science or literature of this period. He edited Ripley’s ‘“‘ Compound of Alchemy,’’ 
Ato, Lond. 1591. 


8 LETTERS ON SCIENTIFIC SUBJECTS. 


All kinde of waters of herbes and flowers are first distilled by 
: discensory. 


Waters of purest substance from odors, flowers, fruites, _ 
and herbes, wholsomest, perfitest, and of greatest vertue, 
are first distiled by desensory, depured and rectified, clere as 
christall, with his owne onlie proper vertue; taste, and odor, 
contynuinge many yeares. One spoonefull is better then a 
gallon of other for any prynce, or noble person, or any that 


love their healthe; for medicyne inward or outward where _ 


other doe much more hurte then good, beinge unaptly dis- | 
tilled, and invenomed by the evill quallitie of mettalyne stilles, 
and other defectes. 


Simple and compound waters. 


Water for odors, moste sweete and delicate, of many seve- 
rall kyndes, bothe simple and compounde. 


Water of violetts and suche like. 


Water of violetts, jilly flowers, and pinckes, &c., contynue 
not nor reteyne not their owne proper odors and vertues, ex- 
cepte they be distilled very cunningly and perfitly by desen- 
sory; or, their odors beinge holpen by other meanes, they 
are not medicinable. 


A precious water for purifyinge and preservinge the teethe. 


A moste precious and excellente water to purifie, preserve, 
and fasten the teethe, and with good order to keep them that 
they shall never decaye nor corrupte ; moste wholsome, plea- 
sant, and comfortable. 


A principall water for moste outward diseases proceedinge of 
heate and colde. 


A water that taketh awaye inflamations, rumes, swellinges, 
colde greifes, colde gowtes, aches, and other paynes; and 
healeth dangerous woundes, ulcers, sores, and the hardest 
diseases, with greate effecte and wonderfull speede, and in 
myne opinion farre exceedeth the farre fetched balmes. 


Water for the eyes. 


Waters for the eyes prooved of many as well for preser- 


vse and comfortinge the sighte, as to restore that which is 
ost. 


LETTERS ON SCIENTIFIC SUBJECTS. 9 


Water to make the skynne and fleshe fayre and brighte. 


Waters to clense and keepe brighte the skynne and fleshe, 
and preserve it in his perfitt state. 


SPECIALL OBSERVATIONS CONCERNINGE THE PREPARA- 
TIONS FOR FIREWORKES. 


An excellente kinde of salt-peter of greate force. 


Saltepeter mighte be so refyned that the powder made 
therof mighte be of double the force, so that one pounde 
maye serve as manye shotte and as stronge as two pounde 
of that that is comonly used, and lesse chardge in cariage ; 
and many other wayes apter and better for service. 


A notable peece of service for your Majestie and the Realme. 


That saltepeter, minerall sulphur, pitche, aspaltum, licqui- 
dion, and drye, and many other like drugges, mighte be 
founde in the domynions of your Majestie, which we wante 
and paye most extreamely for; and God knoweth what gayne 
and glorie mighte redownde to your Majestie and countrey, 
if skilfull and honest men were imployed therein. 


Oyles for fireworkes. 


Oyles bothe simple and composed to be distilled for fire- 
workes, there is none to be boughte or had; he that will have 
them must make them. 


A strange kinde of flyinge fire many wayes serviceable. 


A flyinge fire which shall, without ordynance, and farre of, 
wonderfully annoye any battayle, towne, or campe, and di- 
sperse even as if it did rayne fire; and the devydinge fires, 
being coted and made flyinge, maye touche many places, and 
leave them all burninge; very terrible both to men and 
horse. 

A tridant or mace newly invented. 


A tridant or mace for many notable effectes, bothe for 
shotte, and to sette any thinge on fire; a very apte instru- 
mente, and moste soldierlike bothe for horsemen and foote- 
men. 

Balls of mettle serving to many purposes. 


Balles of mettle to throwe into shippes, to enter in campes 
in the nightes, likewise in streightes or breaches, especially 
in battayles; and to have the said balles of all heightes, dia- 


10 LETTERS ON SCIENTIFIC SUBJECTS. 


miters, and quantities, of a righte composition to devide in | 
as many partes, and of such thicknes as it should ; and to — 
delyver a thousand at once amonge the enemyes with small | 
chardge of ordynance, or other instrumentes, and to powre © 


as much fire as your Majestie will upon any place. 


A shotte to fire in passinge. 


A shotte for greate ordynance to pierce deeper then any ) 
other shotte, and sett on fire whatsoever it strike throughe | 
or sticketh in. A moste noble ingen, specially for sea service. } 


A forcible chariott for service defenswe and offensyve. 


be in, in the feilde or battayle. 
A firy chariott to be fore’d by engyne of greate service. 


A firy chariott without horses to runne upon the battaile 


and disorder it, that no man shal be able to abide or come 


nighe the same, and wil be directed even as men will to — 
tourne, to staye, or come directly backe upon any presente — 
danger, or elles to followe and chase the enemye in their 


flighte. 


Mynes for fireworke to worke strange effectes. 


Mynes of fire and fireworke, bothe for sea and lande, to — 
overthrowe or make havocke of all whatsoever a man will 


destroye. 


A meanes to better the use of small artillery, moste 
serviceable. 


To make that smalle shotte shail doe greater execution — 
then the shotte that hath hetherto bynne knowne; yet where — 
1000 are nowe shotte, and not 10 men fall, it will appeare, — 
by good demonstration and experience, that 10 shotte of 1000 


shall hardly misse, good orders beinge observed. 


A newe invented targett of proofe. 
A targett of proofe, with his rest and loope hole, whereby 


men are notably defended and encouraged to the attemptinge — 


of manye greate matters in service. Tenne of theis targettes 


are sufficiente to defende an hundred shotte, as if they were — 


behinde a walle. 


i 
A firy chariott with horses, suche as never was knowne or © 
hearde of, for any prynce or man of greate valor or vertue to — 


LETTERS ON SCIENTIFIC SUBJECTS. 11 


A rare invention. 


A muskett or calyver, with dyvers strange and forcible 
shotte, which no armor will holde out, at three quarters of a 
mile or more; and will also become a most forcible weapon 
in the hande, as good as a pollox, and, with a teice, become 
a perfitt shotte agayne. 


An armed pike moste forcible. 


An arme pike which a weake man maye use or handle 
very reddily with such force as a man will not thincke, and 
the same pike will also become a very good shotte at all 
tymes. But when they come to the very pushe they be 
most terrible, bothe the shotte and the weapon. 


An engyne of notable defence for the safegard of mens lyves. 


A cariage in manner of a walle or curteyne to defende men 
from shotte in approchinge any sconse or other force, and wil 
be transformed into as many severall shapes of fortification as 
men will; and also be as tentes or lodginges drye above heade, 
and from the grounde, and also very offensyve, and of greate 
fury ; whereof I wishe your excellente Majestie were furnished, 
but as secrette as I could keepe them in myne owne harte 
for some greate daye of service. 


A speciall peece of service. 


A meanes whereby our plowe-horses, carte jades, and 
hackneys, maye be made to doe greater service in our owne 
countrey, then the launces, or argulaters, or any horsemen of 
other nations, can possibly be able to doe in their ordinary 
services. 


The rarest engyne that ever was invented for sea service*. 


A vessell in manner of a galley or galliotte to passe upon 
the seas and ryvers without oars or sayle, against wynde and 
tyde, swifter then any that ever hath bynne seene, of won- 
derfull effect bothe for intelligence, and many other admi- 
rable exploytes, almoste beyonde the expectation of man. 


* See Rara Mathematica, p. 87. William Bourne mentions a similar invention 
of his in the Jnventions or Devises (Lond. 1578, 4to). How well does this meagre 
description suit the modern steam-boat! I may mention here that the invention of 
paddle-wheels is ascribed to him by some writers, and he appears to consider them 
as a new invention ; but there is a drawing of a boat with paddle-wheels, precisely 
similar to our modern steam-vessels, in MS. Harl. 3281, fol. 43, v°, written in Italy 
in the fifteenth century. See also the ff. 43, r°, 51, v°, and 57,r°, of the same MS. 


12 LETTERS ON SCIENTIFIC SUBJECTS. 


Matters to be prepared and had in reddynes. 


Calibashes, caces, hollowe tronckes, and other instrumentes, 
of smalle chardge and greate effecte for the services of your 
Majestie and countrey many wayes, which have bynne 
more chardgeable to me, then they would be to your Ma- 
jestie, if good order mighte be taken therein. For some 
workemen have taken my money, and have spoiled my mo- 
delles and devises, and I could never gette my money, the 
ingions, nor yet my modelles agayne, and the devises in some 
sorte made publique, which I woulde have kepte secrette. 
But if it pleased God to put into your royall harte, bothe for 
his owne glorie, the glorie of your excellent Majestie, and 
your valiant nation and subjectes, to erecte some academy, 
or place of studdy and practice, for ingenious, pollitique and 
learned men, aud apte artificers, as in a corporation or bodie 
pollitique, maintayned partly by your Majestie and partly by 
your nobillitie, your clergie, and your comons, for theis moste 
noble effectes. And whereas many corporations, societies of 
artes, faculties, and misteries, have bynne erected, founded, 
and franchised, with many honorable guiftes, liberties, and 
freedomes, by your Majesties moste worthy progenitors, but 
never any comparable to this, in glorie to your Majestie 
and the safetie and comforte of your countrey and people, 
which every vertuous and good mynded man would willingly 
further and maintayne for their owne good and safetie, and 
to the perpetuall glorie of your Majestie, and your feirce 
people, and valiante nation, that ingenious pollicies mighte 
throughly joyne with strength and valiant hartes of men. 
The which I referre to your Majesties moste deepe considera- 
tion, for the service of my countrey, holdinge myselfe here- 
by fully every waye dischardged in dutie bothe towardes your 
Majestie and my countrey. 

Your Majesties moste loyall subjecte, 
and faithfull servant, 
Rapue RapBarps*. 


* The writer has annexed the following note addressed to Lord Burghley :— 

“‘ At your Honors pleasure and leisure I shall so satisfie your Lordship, that 
you shall not doubte of the performance of them, which none shall knowe but her 
Majestie and your Honor.” 


LETTERS ON SCIENTIFIC SUBJECTS. 13 


DR. JOHN DEE TO LORD BURGHLEY*. 


(MS. Lansd. No. 19. Art. 38. Orig.] 


Right honorable and my singuler good Lord,—Whereas of 
late your honor very favorably used me, considering your 
mervailous skantnes of leysor from very waighty matters and 
publick: I am now, therefore, most humbly to render thanks 
to your honor. Sins which tyme I have som whole dayes 
attended at London, hoping for your lordship comming. 
thither. And on fryday last, perceyving your honor to be 
almost in a redines to ride toward the court, ere I could get 
to London (after I hard of your lordship certayn being there) 
I than thowght the season to be very unfeete for my purpose. 
Therfore finding your Lordship, at all tymes of usuall access 
for suters, so fraught with matters of more importance than 
any of myne can justly be deemed, I thowght good (with your 
lordships leave and favor) thus by writing to enjoye one 
howre of your lordships leisour (best known to your Lord- 
ship onely, whan that is) to vew the pattern of som part of my 
symple sute: which hertofore I wold gladly have opened 
unto your honor by word of mowth; and that is this. So 
much of my intent and studious doings is well known unto 
your honor, and the most part of all universities in Christen- 
dome (and farder); that for this xx. yeres last past, and 
longer, it may be very truely avowched that I have had a 
mervailous zeale, taken very greate care, endured great tra- 
vayle and toyle, both of mynde and body, and spent very 
many hundred powndes, onely for the attayning some good 
and certayn knowledg in the best and rarest matters mathe- 
maticall and philosophicall. How little or much therin the 
zternall God hath imparted to me (for my talent) He onely 
best knoweth. But certaynly by due conference with all that 
ever I yet met with in Europe, the pore English Bryttains 
(Il favorito, di vostra Excellentia) hath carried the bell away. 
God Almighty have the glory! The same zeale remayneth 
(yea, rather, greater is grown). But the hability, for chargis, 
is far lesser ; and that somwhat occasioned the sooner, throwgh 
my frank dealing for procuring and purchasing speady meanes 
of good knowledg. Which also I did uppon no small hope 


* This letter has been partly printed by Strype, in his Annals of the Reformation, 
vol. ii. App. xlv. The conclusion of it is a striking example of the little attention that 
was paid to the preservation of ancient records; it is known, from Dr. Dee’s well- 
known memorial addressed to Elizabeth on the subject, that a MS. of Cicero “ De 
Republica” was even as late as the sixteenth century preserved in the library of Can- 
terbury cathedral. 


14 LETTERS ON SCIENTIFIC SUBJECTS. 


that som nedefull supportail wolde be for me (in due tyme) 
devysed: eyther throwgh the meer and gracious good favour 
that I was perswaded the Q. most excellent Majesty did 
beare unto me, or els throwgh the procurement of some of 
the right honorable cownsaylours, which both right weli 
knew, by how hard dealing my father Roland Dee (servant 
to her Majesties father the most renowned and triumphant 
King of our age) was disabled for leaving unto me due mayn- 
tenance: and also sufficiently understode of sundry sutes in 
my behalf motioned, for some ayde toward the atcheving of 
some of my honest intents. Of which sutes no one (hither- 
to) hath taken the wished for success, for any my behofe. 
Nay, in the mean tyme of some my travayles beyond the seas, 
unleast your honor had put to your helping hand, I had 
byn defeated of that little exhibition, which I enjoye; being 
but borrowed a while, by speciall priviledge and favor extra- 
ordinary. And that unwillingly un my part, if I could other 
wayes have had the supply therof in like yerely value, which 
(as God knoweth) findeth not me, and my pore familie, ne- 
cessary meat, drink, and fewel, for a frugall and philosophi- 
call dyet. But if I may (with your Lordships favor) speak 
as I think, unfaynedly: unleast your honor had supposed that 
I had odly committed the care for my necessary mayntenance 
unto some other noble cownsaylour than yourself: veryly I 
judge, that, long ere this, your honor would have made me 
to have tasted of that mervaylously famous your honorable 
constant and lucky favour and benedicite of the Court 
Royall; whereby, may have bin and are made liable to dis- 
pend of their owne yerely, thre, fowre, five, &c. of hundred 
pownds. To compare with any of them in desert publik or 
lerning, I neyther dare, nor justly can. But in zeale to the 
best lerning and knowledg, and in incredible toyle of body 
and mynde, very many yeres therfore onely endured: I know 
most assuredly that this land never bred any man, whose ac- 
cownt therin can evidently be proved greater than myne. I 
trust that this my simple speche, uttered in the record of my 
conscience, and with a sincere estimate both of myne and my 
predecessors doings, will not seme to your wisdome arro- 
gantly vaunted; onely God can make the perswasion of the 
truth hereof to settle into the bottom of your lordships hart. 
And fearing to offend your honor any way, eyther with rude 
homelyness, or with superfluitie of wordes, I will cut of all 
such digressions ; and committing myself, and my honest 
purposes, wholy to your Lordships protection and direction 
henceforward, I beseche your honor to accept my faithfull 
good meaning toward your Lordship, which, dayly and 


LETTERS ON SCIENTIFIC SUBJECTS. 15 


« 


_howerly, will (by God’s grace) appeare unto your lordship 
more and more abundantly. Returning now, therefore, to 
the matter wherof I last (by mowth) spake unto your honor, 
_ and which, also, was the last principall point of my spedy letter 
than delivered to your Lordship,—As concerning thresor hid. 
First, it may pleas your lordship to consider this clause 

truely by me noted out of Theseus Ambrosius, fol. 206, b. 
In copiosa illa Antonii de Fantis Tarvisini librorum multitu- 

dine, magnum sane volumen repertum fuit, in quo abdita quam 
plurima, et satis abunde curiosa, tam ad philosophiam, medi- — 

cinam, et herbarum notionem, quam etiam ad astrologiam, geo- 

mantiam, et magiam, pertinentia continebantur. Et in ejus 
 precipua quadam parte tractabatur de thesauris per totum 
Jere orbem reconditis atque latentibus, quorum admodum clara 
atque specifica notio haberi poterat, &c. Secondly out of 
Henricus Leicestrensis (I suppose) it is noted, in the sum- 
mary of English chronicles, anno 1344, of a Sarazin comming 
than to Erle Warren, as concerning a great threasor hid in 
his grownd, in the Marches of Wales, and of the good suc- 
cess therof. Thirdly (for this xx. yeres space) I have had 
sundry such matters detected unto me, in sundry lands. 
Fowrthly, of late, I have byn sued unto by diverse sorts of 

eople, of which, some by vehement iterated dreames, some 

y vision, as they have thowght, other, by speche forced to 
their imagination by night, have byn informed of certayn 

laces where threasor doth lye hid; which all, for feare of 
Bt, as the phrase commonly nameth them, or for mistrust 
of truth in the places assigned, and some for some other 
causes, have forborn to deale farder, unleast I shold corrage 
them, or cownsaile them, how to procede. Wherein I have 
_ allways byn contented to heare the histories, fantasies, or il- 
) lusions to me reported, but never entermeddled according to 
the desire of such. Hereof might grow many articles of 
question and controversie among the common lerned; and 
_ skruple among the theologians: which all I cut of from this 
} place, ready to answer onely your Lordship most largely, in 
termes of godly philosophie, whan opportunitie shall serve: 
making small accownt of vulgar opinions in matter of so rare 
_ knowledg: but making allways my chief reckening to do no- 
thing but that which may stand with the profession of a true 
Christian, and of a faithfull subject. But, if, (besides all 
bokes, dreames, visions, reports and virgula divina) by any 
other naturall meanes and likely demonstrations of sympathia 
and antipathia rerum, or by attraction and repulsion, the places 
' may be discryed or discovered, where gold, silver, or better 
matter, doth lye hid, within a certayne distance: how great a 


16 LETTERS ON SCIENTIFIC SUBJECTS. 


commodity shold it be for the Quenens Majestie, and the com- 
mon weale of this Kingdome, by such a secret, not onely threa- 
sor hid may be deciphered in precise place: but, also, it may 
be disclosed where, in this land, any mynes, vaynes, or owre | 
of gold or silver be naturally planted. And here (by the way) 
I must note unto your Lordship the name and argument of © 
one strange boke, which, in old tyme, was in this land,—Pan- — 
DULPHUS DE MEATIBUS TERR: qui cunctas venas, meatus, — 
atqueaditus subterraneos, conflexiones, specus,antra et interiora — 
latibula, cavernulasque terrarum, porositates, profunditates, 
concavitatesque totius seculi materialis, et ambitus subtus ter-— 
ram enumerat singillatim. So that by this and the former 4 

; 


= Sta a ee oe ee — - 
he Gal, aces ie ie oe ire ae Ae 2 Te oe oe ie 


boke it may appeare what manner of philosophers and ma- — 
thematiciens have bin in tymes past. Conclusionally than, 
in respect of all the premisses, one part of my present sute © 
unto your honor is that, by your lordships wisdome, the — 
Queens Majestie may be induced to think somwhat favorably © 
(as very many other, noble and lerned, of forrayn lands do) 
of my great travailes, patience, constancy, costs, and credit, — 
in matters philosophicall and mathematicall: and thereuppon, 
in the ende of my carefull race, to let some token of her Ma- 
jesties royall good affection procede toward me, whome, your — 
lordship knoweth (or may know) that emperors, kings, 
princes, dukes, marchises, erles, barons, and other many 
men, of great powre and magnificent courrage, have sued — 
unto (in my tyme) to enjoye my simple talent, in their ser-— 
vice or company: to whome all, I ever have given answer ~ 
(as my duety was, and my stomach served me therto) for the — 
honor of my naturall and drad soveraigne (for that tyme) — 
here raigning. Your honor knoweth that thresor trouvé is — 
a very casuall thing: and of which, althowgh the prerogative — 
of the Q. Majestie do entitle to her a proprietie, yet how sel- 
dome her Grace hath hitherto receyved any commodity ther- — 
by,—it is to your honor better known, than unto me. But 
as for mines of gold and silver, to be in England or Ireland, 
many have written and reported both of old tyme, and latter: 
as I think, your honor hath, ere this, hard abundantly dis- 
coursed. The value of a myne is a matter for a King’s — 
threasor ; but a pot of two or three hundred pownds, &c., — 
hid in the grownd, wall, or tree, is but the price of a good — 
boke or instrument for perspective, astronomy, or som feat 
of importance. And truely vulgar, obscure persons, as ho- 
siers and tanners, can (by colour of seking assays of metalls, — 
for the say master) enjoye liberty to content their fantasies 
to dig after dremish demonstrations of places, &c. May not 
I, than (in respect of all the former allegations of my pains, 


LETTERS ON SCIENTIFIC SUBJECTS. 17 


ost, and credit, in matters philosophicall and mathematicall) 
f no better or easyer way to serve my turn will fall to my 
from her Majesties hands; may not I than (I say) be 
thowght to meane and intend good service toward the Q. 
Majestie and this realme, if I will do the best I can at my 
own costis and chargis, to discover, and deliver true profe of 
a myne, vayn, or owre of gold, or silver, in some one place 
of her graces kingdoms and dominions, to her graces onely 
use; in respect, I mean, of any my demaund or part to be 
had therof. But uppon this comfortable consideration, that 
her Majesty do frely give unto me, by good warranty and 
assurance of her letters-patents, her right and propriety to 
all thresor trouvé, and such things commodious, as (under 
that name and meaning comprised) by digging or search any 
where, in her graces kingdomes and dominions, I, or my as- 
signes shall come to, or finde: and with all good warranty 
(for my indemnity) agayn all laws and persons, to make serch 
by digging, or otherwise. And this to dure the terme of my 
life. And in token of my hart fully bent to shew myself 
thankfull to your lordship for compasing eyther of these two 
wayes: (I mean eyther an easyer means of provision, for two 
hundred pownds, yerely, during my life: or this casual marts 
of paynfull search) ; before God, 1 promise unto your lord- 
ship (or will by oth uppon the Evangelists be bownde) of all 
thresor trouvé (commyng to my hands) to impart unto your 
lordship, or your assignes, the one half, during my life. 
Moreover your Lordship may be most assured that any no- 
table benefit (throwgh your L. meanes) bestowed uppon me 
now in the very pynch and opportunytie, shall not, ne yet 
ean, be hid under a bushell: but is like with your L. famous 
renown, very far immortally to be blazed. ‘The third and 
last principall point of this my present sute to your L., is for 
_your L. hand to a letter directed to Mr. Harly, keper of the 
records of Wigmor castell, or to whome, in this case, it doth 
appertayn. For that, at my late being there, I espied an 
heap of old papers and parchments, obligations, acquittances, 
accownts, &c. (in tyme past belonging to the abbay of Wig- 
mor) and there to lye rotting, spoyled, and tossed, in an old 
decayed chappell, not committed to any man’s speciall charge: 
but thre quarters of them I understand to have byn taken 
away by diverse (eyther taylors, or others, in tymes past). 
Now my fantasie is that, in som of them, will be some men- 
tion made of noblemen and gentlemen of those dayes, where- 
by (eyther for chronicle or pedigree) som good matter may be 
collected out of them by me (at my leysor) by the way of a 
recreation. And whatsoever I shall finde in them, eyther of 
c 


18 LETTERS ON SCIENTIFIC SUBJECTS. 


your L. ancestors (in direct line, braunche, collaterall, or | 
match) wherin I am not utterly ignorant: eyther of any other 
matter worthy your lordships knowledg; I will make true — 
report, and deliver the same to your L. ordring; but els they | 
ar to unclenly (som of them) for your L. eyes to behold. | 
Thus, in the perswaded security of your L. favorable inter- | 
preting of all the premisses, I ende this long letter, beseech- | 
ing the blessed Trinity that this florishing kingdome may — 
long enjoye the great talent committed to your L. (from ~ 
above) and, on your L. behalf, moste wisely employed to the — 
welth and tranquilitye of this kingdome. | 
This 3 of October, 1574. 
Your L. most bownden, 
JOHN DEE, 
To the right honorable and my singular 
good lord and patron, the L. Burgh- 
ley, Lord High Threasorer of England. 


HUMPHREY COLE TO LORD BURGHLEY. 


[MS. Lansd. No. 26, Art. 22. Orig.] 
Ath December, 1578. 
Righte Honourable,—Whereas Mr. Edwarde Dyer pre- — 


sented to your honour a peece of greene owre which he had ~ 
of me, yt was your honour’s pleasure that I should make © 
serche for it at my goinge into the northe, which I accom- — 
plished according to your honnour’s appointemente, and have ~ 
brought some of it with me from the place where it was got- — 
ten; the whiche I woulde have presented to your honnour 
longe before this tyme, but for that I dwell in London, I ~ 
durst not presume to come to the courte unto you. Where- | 
fore I have nowe sente the same unto your honnours by Mr. — 
Walter, one of your gentlemen, certefienge your honnour 
that it was founde in the digging of a quarry in the grounde ~ 
of Mr. Robert Bowes of Aske in the Countie of Richemonde, | 
soe neere unto his house there (upon the which he is nowe ~ 
bestowinge greate coste in buildinges) that in the digging ~ 
for the same owre his howse may be undermined. Howbeit 
there be other places thereaboute wherein the same owre, or | 
the like, in good plentie might be serched and founde; for — 
there was plentie of it in that place where I had this, but I — 
perceave the said gentleman dare not digge for it, for that he | 
feareth thereby to undermyne and hurte the foundacion of 


LETTERS ON SCIENTIFIC SUBJECTS. 19 


_ his said house, and it appeareth that in old tyme there hathe 
_ bene within a quarter of a mile of the same place preate 
woorkinge, but noe man to this daye knoweth to what pur- 
oo Onelic this I heare, that there was an olde recorde 
_ found mencioninge that those hilles thereaboutes were called 

riche mounts or divites montes, whereof the towne of Rich- 

mont took the name and was called Richmounts. And thus 
_ 1am bolde to declare the reporte thereof to your honnour, as 
_ yt was tolde unto me; and I doubte not to discover manie _ 
' profitable thinges bothe there and in other places in that 
countrey, if I had occasion to remaine thereaboute. And if 
it please your honnour to use my service in this or anie other 
thinges according to my skill, I am at youre honnors co- 
maundemente, havinge founde you my good lord at all 
times. For by your good meanes I was placed in the tower 
to serve the Quene in the mynte to doe the servyces perteyn- 
inge to the mill, that, when Eloy the ffrenchman shoulde be 
taken therefrom by death or otherwise, I should enjoye the 
same. And towarde my staie of livinge till that office shoulde 
fall, there was alowed unto me the ffee of the sincker of the 
stampes, being £20 by yere; and he that nowe exerciseth 
that place hath not other thing to live on but the half of my 
ffee. And nowe he refuseth to serve in it anie longer, where- 
fore I humblie besech your honour to continewe my good 
lorde, that I maye be established in that house, office and 
flee, which the said Eloy had, which I have staied for theis 
xxtie, yeres, and thereby spente the best of my tyme to my 
greate hindraunce, lackinge sufficiente maintenaunce for me 
and my family. Albeit that I hoped, by the service whiche I 
have donne and can doe, both in this respecte and in manie 
other thinges, if I were called thereto, to have obteigned some 
suche prefermente before this time, as that I should not nowe 
have bene destitute of livinge in this my olde age. And thus 
remayninge alwaies readie to serve the Quenes Majesty, and 
to die in hir service, I praie God that hir noble highnes maie 
have a longe lief, that I and manie other maie serve hir manie 
yeres, and that your honnours health and prosperous estate 
maye longe contynewe. 

From London this iiij.th of December, 1578. 
Your honor’s moste humble suppliante, 

: HUMFREY COLE*. 
To the right honnourable and his singuler 
good Lorde the L. Burghley, Lorde 
Highe Treasorer of England. 


_* Humphrey Cole was the most distinguished mechanist in England at this pe- 
_ viod. Gabriel Harvey in a MS. note on the margin of a copy of Blagrave’s Ma- 


c 2 


a aa 


20 LETTERS ON SCIENTIFIC SUBJECTS. 


DR. JOHN DEE TO CHARLES JACKMAN AND ~— 
ARTHUR PETT. 


[MS. Lansd. No. 122, Art. 5, Orig.] 


Instructions for the two masters, Charles Jackman and Arthur — 
Pett, geven and delyvered to them, at the Court day holden 
at the Moschovy house, the 17th of May, anno 1580, with — 
which instructions a new charte (made by hand) was geven — 
allso to eche of the sayd two Masters, expressing their Cathay — 
voyage more exactly then any other yet published. ‘i 

In the name of Jesus! t 

Yf we recken from Wardhouse to Colgoyeve Iland 400 © 
myles, for allmost 20 degrees difference, only of longitude, © 
very nere east and west, and abowt the latitude of 703. } 
And from Colgoyeve to Vaygatz 200 myles, for 10 degrees — 
difference (only in longitude) at 70 degrees of latitude allso. — 
And from Vaygatz to the promontory Tabin, being 60 de- ~ 
grees different in longitude; (the whole course or shortest — 
distance betwene which two is allso east and west, in the la- © 
titude likewise of 70) are 1200 myles.. Then is summa totalis — 
from Wardhouse to Tabin, 600 leages or 1800 myles Eng- — 
lish. : 
Therefore allowing in a discovery voyage, for one day with 
an other, but 50 myles English; yt is evident that from 

Wardhouse to Tabin, the course may be sayled easily in 36 ' 

dayes. But by God’s help, it may be fynisshed in much — 

shorter tyme: both by help of wynde prosperous, and lyght 

continuall for the tyme requisite thereto. t 
When you are past Tabin, or come to the longitude of 142 ' 

(as your charte sheweth) or 2, 3, 4, or 5 degrees farder 

easterly, it is probable that you shall fynde the lande on your : 

right hand, running much sowtherly and eastward, in which — 
course you are like either to fall into the mowth of the famous 
ryver Oechardes, or some other: which (yet) I conjecture, to 
pas by the renowned City of Cambalu: and that mouth to 
be in the latitude abowt 50 or 52 degrees, and within 300 or 
400 myles of Cambalu, ytself being in latitude abowt 45 de- 


thematical Jewel in the British Museum, mentions “ old Humphrie Cole” as a _ 
“‘ mathematical mechanician”’ ; and he applies the same term to him in his work | 
entitled Pierces Supererogation, 4to. Lond. 1593, p. 190. William Bourne also, 
in his Jnventions or Devises, Lond. 1578, p. 17, makes honourable mention of him - 
as an inventor. <A mathematicalinstrausentanaker of the same name, living 
“neere unto the North dore” of St. Paul’s, is mentioned by Worsop in his work 
entitled Discoverie of sundrie errors and faults daily committed by Lande-meaters, 
4to, Lond. 1582; but I am uncertain whether this latter notice refers to the same 
person. 


4 LETTERS ON SCIENTIFIC SUBJECTS, 21 
grees sowtherly of the said river mowth: or els, that you 
shall trend about the very northen and most easterly poynt 
of all Asia, passing by the province Ania, and then in the la- 
_titude of 46, keping still the land in vewe on your right hand 
(as nere as you may with safety) you may enter into Quinsay 
haven, being the chief city in the northen China, as I terme 
yt, for distinction sake, from the other better known. 

And in, or about eyther, or both of these two warme places, 
you may (to great good purpose) be occupyed the whole 
wynter after your aryvall in those quarters: as, sometyme by 
sea, sometyme in notable fresh ryvers, sometymes in discrete 
vew, and noting down the situation of cities within land, &c.: 
and ever assaying to come by some chartes, or maps, of the 
cuntry, made and printed in Cathay or China; and by some 
of their bookes likewise, for language, &c. 

- You may have opportunity allso to sayle over to Japan 
Iland, where you shall fynde Christen men, Jesuites of many 
euntries of Christendom, and perhaps some Englishemen ; 
at whose hands you may have great instruction and advise 
for our affayres in hand. God be favorable to these attempts, 
greatly tending to his glory, and the great honour of this 
kingdome! Amen*. 
Anno 1580. A. Maij. 15. 

By me Joun Dre. 


STEPHEN POWLE TO MR. WEST. 


[MS. Lansd. No. 100. Art. 19.] 


The coppie of my letter to Mr. West whearin is the tower 
and fabricke of the horologe in Strasbourg described. 


_ Right worshipfull Sir, and my moste especiall good frend ; 
Whereas it pleased you in your letter dated the 8. of No- 
vember, moste courteously to request that of me which your 
manifowld desertes of right might have commaunded, I have 
endeavored, accordinge to the utmoste of my power, which 
doth shewe the smalnes of my skill, to satisfie your request 
therein, and have noted the particular poinctes of the tower 
and clocke of Strasbourge; wherein, because I finde many 
thinges farr to exceed the reporte, therefore I feare to under- 
take this bould enterprice, to send them put downe in wri- 
tinge. For as Allexander, which was the only monarch was 


* Among the Harleian charters, EE. xix., is “the counterfet of Mr. Fernando 
- Simon his sea charte, whiche he lent unto my master at Mortlake, anno 1580,” 
In the same collection, EE. xvii., is Dr. Dee’s own chart. 


22 LETTERS ON SCIENTIFIC SUBJECTS. 


never pourtracted in table but of Apelles, never graven in 
brasse but of Lisippus, nor at any tyme praised in assembles 
but of Ephestion, least by the unskilfulnes of any other the 
glory of his renoune might be empaired; so of right this 
tower, which is the only wonder I heare of, shoold never be 
described but of sutche exquisit men in paintinge, carvinge 
and speach, as weare those forenamed persons; and myself 
ought rather to be silent (beinge acquainted with mine owne 
simplicitie in that behalf), then by endeavoringe to describe 
the workmanshipp detract from the wonder and mervaile 
that all menn have so justly thereof conceaved. But as those 
that had the vewe of the pyramides in Egipt weare rather 
astonid with the sight, then able to decypher those hidden ~ 
misteries covered with the shoe of hieroglificall beastes, and 
therefore they presented the formes and models thereof only 
unto there frendes at there retoorne,toprocure therein also ther 
delight. In like sorte my self, in behouldinge theise German 
pyramides with an admiringe mynde, following there exam- 
ple, have sent you heer enclosed theise two sheetes of paper, 
which doe figure foorth, although obscurely, the shininge ex- 
cellencye of that they represent; wishinge there all that the 
painters cunninge had been aunswerable to ther curious 
rarnes, for then your pleasure should have been in every re- — 
spect equall with your desyre. But this want of his must — 
be supplied with your judgement, which like the skilful geo- 
metrician, cann by one smale part proportionably gather the 
whoale boddie, or by measuringe only the shadowe discerne 
the heyth of the tower; and like unto Pithagoras that find- 
inge in ludis Olympiacis but one stadium, which contayned 
three hundred feet, therbie conceive the huge monstrous 
stature of the geant Hercules the measurer thereof. But 
yeat least you, by behouldinge theis dumme, silent and mute 
pictures, finde more to amaze your minde, then to delight 
your eye, I present myself unto you as a bashfull trush- 
man to unfould there meaninge. Yf I interpret there wordes 
amis attribut that fault to my unskilfulnes of there speech, 
because they be Germans by nature, and myself am not per- 
fectly acquainted with there tounge, by reason of the smalnes 
of my continuaunce: I might also add this for a more juste 
excuse, that I am not a professour of there arte, and there- 
fore unfitt to be an expressour of there misteries. But that 
which embouldeneth me is this, that though I aunswere not 
there worthines, yet I shall after a sort observe decorum, in. 
beinge as farr of from presentinge the veary truth by my 
penn, as the painter is from describinge the lively vew thereof 
by the draught of his pensell. 

The citie of Strasbourge is called in Latin Argentina, for 


LETTERS ON SCIENTIFIC SUBJECTS, 23 


_ the nomber of silver mynes which be founde in the contry of 
_ Alsatia, wherein it is seated. The which, as it hath the walles 
fortified with moste artificiall bulwarkes for to defend them 

without from the force of enemies, so the houses be adorned 
| with moste curious paintings to delight within the behoulders : 
_ for the excellencie of both which it is placed emongest the 
_ cheef cities in theise partes of Germany, and renounid through 
all Europe for the workmanshipp of the tower, and the artifi- 
_ciall mocions, morall figures and astronomicall instruments 
inclosed in the fabricke of a clocke. The tower is moste 
_ spoken of for the arte in rearinge up a heape of so many 
_ stones, almost contrary to nature, six hundred foote highe in 
_ the aire, so geometrically that it seameth rather to hange 
therein then lean on any sure fondation, and that it hath 
continewed almost this four hundred yeares. I assure you, 
sir, to behoulde the same, beinge in the topp thereof, it seam- 
eth to have threatned ruine ever since the first hower it was 
built, passadge lying open through every stone thereof to the 
_ winde and the weather in sutch sorte that I scarcely remem- 
ber my beinge on the heith thereof without a tremblinge ter- 
rour, consideringe that I might have fallen to the grownde 
every moment throwghe the same. There is added to this 
rare heith a mervelous sensible deceipt of the behoulder, for 
it seameth not to be by the half so high, to take the vewe 
thereof from the foundation. I attribute this to the smale 
hould the beames of the eyes can have on the stones of this 
} buildinge, beinge everie waie (as I before have mencioned) 
| perflatiles, and the force of the sight beinge divided into so 
} many and sundry partes (by the meanes of those chiones it 
lighteth on when any man looketh up to the tower,) is made 
more weake and feable, and, therefore, cannot by reflection 
bringe backe to the eyes the perfect forme of the object; for 
the sence of seinge beinge the servaunt of the mynde, dooth 
| represent by the eyes (which be, as Plato termeth them, ad 
| animam perforate fenestre,) the trew shape of that thinge it 
| was commaunded to behould, sendinge forthe his beames, as 
| bailifs, to arest the object to appeare before reason that keap- 
eth his coort in man’s mynde; which, beinge vearye switte, 
escapeth, and is not attayned to by pursute; and by that 
reason, lookinge on a whirlinge wheele, wee discerne not the 
spookes thereof, nor on birdes flyinge wee see no fethers ; 
or yf the object be veary farr of, as out of his bailiwike, he re- 
| toorneth non est inventus; and therefore we attaine not by 
sight the grasse that groweth on mountaines farr of, nor dis- 
cern branches though wee behould the trees; or if they be 


24 LETTERS ON SCIENTIFIC SUBJECTS. 


but informed by others, then they reporte falsly ; and there- — 
fore men behouldinge the moone in the horizon, through and — 
by the meane of the moist and vaperous aier, the eles reporte _ 
to the minde the moone to be bigger then it is 2 howers | 
after: and an ower to be broken in the waves that is whole; 
a penny in a boule of water to be a grote for bignes: or, if — 
theise ballifes meet with an artificiall object, then as with a — 
suptill sophister, beinge deluded, they err in there arrant 
likewise ; and that is the reason why Zeuxis’ painted grapes | 
dasled the sighte of the birdes, and whye Parrhasius coort- | 
ine deceaved Zeuxis the painter; that Pigmalion’s handes, © 
in beinge in love with his owne picture, deceaved his eyes; — 
and to applie it to this present example, this seameth to me © 
the reason why this artificiall tower deceaveth the behoulder. | 

In the fabricke of the clocke which standeth in the church, ~ 
nature for geavinge sutch an excellent subject to woork on, © 
the will of the devisor for his invention and disposition, and ~ 
the handes of the artificers for there exquisitenes in gravinge, — 
carvinge and paintinge, and all three for the consent they — 
had in the perfettinge this rare devise, are so much to be won- — 
dered at, that the behoulder remaineth douptfull to which 
he shoold geave the glory or praise, for it should seem they — 
all contended for the highest pomt of wonderfull admiration. 
Nature hath geaven a kinde of woode, called Zilly, which — 
hardly can be discerned from stone. The devisor hath placed — 
in this, besides divers incredible motions, the best instru-_ 
ments of astronomy; and the painters hath bestowed thereon ~ 
the summe of their cunninge and the perfection of there arte. 
‘l'o retoorne to the devise, therein is to be seen a shoe of eter- ~ 
nitie ; the beginninge of ‘Tyme and a vewe of Age; the periods — 
of the planetes; the yearly and dailie motion of the soonne in 
the zodiake ; the convertion of the moone in her cycle, and a ~ 
more particular distinction of tyme by motions artificiall of | 
weakes, daies, howers, quarters and minutes: adorned also 
it is with beautifull pictures of holly and prophane stories, © 
and with admirable motions of men, beastes and birdes. To | 
entreat of theis partes in order doth cause me to be prepos-— 
terous, for first I must describe the heele and after, last of all, 
the heade. Eternitie is partly figured by the begininge, and 
partly also by the laste parte of the fabricke. The pellican 
that supporteth the globe dooth represent the poet’s Atlas, 
whome they fained to beare the woorld on his shouldiers ; but — 
Christians do resemble it to our Saviour, by whome all thinges | 
have there life, as the globe hath hir motion by the instru-_ 
mentes conveyed in the belly of the pellican. Tyme is figured 


+ 
—_ 
fiellhe! 
- 


a 
‘ 
ui 


? 


LETTERS ON SCIENTIFIC SUBJECTS. 25 


by the heavenly globe; for as by the one wee knowe the re- 
‘volution of the moveable yeare, so by the other wee discerne 


_ the distinction of all motion, for the philosophers define tyme 


to be mensura motus. Before the heavens weare created 
_ there was no naturall motion, and, by that reason, there 


wold be no mensura motus. That estate of beinge which was 
before the creacion of the woorld was called therefore eter- 
nitie; because therefore the pellican is placed firste, out of 
which proceedeth the cause of the motion of the globe which 
representeth the woorld, therefore the pellican figureth forth 
eternitie, and the globe representeth the begininge of tyme. 
The globe is moved every daie by a circular and violent mo- 
tion, and therein the soone in his naturall coorse kepeth the 
eclipticall line, whoe, although he be likewise whirled about 
by the violence of primum mobile everie daie from the east to 
the weast, yeat in his zodiake he finissheth his naturall coorce 
from the weast to the easte every yeare; which tyme is said 
to be his period, as that also of the moone in twentie eight 
daies and eight minutes; that of Saturne in thirtie yeare ; 
Jubiter in five yeare and eight dayes, and so likwise of the 
reste; and that of the eighth spher (which is tearmed cwelum 
stellatum), where the fixed starres remayne in six and thirtie 
thowsand yeares, which is the period of the spher, and it is 
called magnus annus Platonis, because he held opinion that 
then all thinges should beginne anew. The third yallowe 
great compas (that resembleth after a sorte a wheele, by rea- 
son of the forme and read lines that be like spookes,) setteth 
forth a callander for one hundred yeares (in the 4 corners of 
which be described the 4 monarchies), which was called of the 
poetes the age of man, and therefore they fained that Nestor 
lived three men’s lives, because he was three hundred yeares 
owld, and this callander doth morally signifie age, and parti- 
cular describeth the daies of the moneth, the letter Domini- 
call, the Epact, and the goulden number, all which be shewed 
by the arrowe of Apollo, there painted in the left hand of the 
table, and by the finger of Diana on the right side thereof. 
The great circompherence of this circle that is coloured yalow 
finisheth his cours in a yeare, the inwarde part that is co- 
loured blewe in a hundred yeares retourneth to his period. 

Over which be motions of the planetes, as they geave the de- 
nomination to the daies, as on sunday the sonne presenteth 
him self, drawen in a chariot with towe white horses, with his 
strength Leo, The moone of munday, drawen in chariot by 
twoe redd hartes, her strength Cancer. Mars on tewsdaie, 
drawen in his coach by twoe tigers, assisted with his strength 
Aries and Scorpio. Mercury on wednesday, drawen by twoe 


26 LETTERS ON SCIENTIFIC SUBJECTS. 


redd cockes, with his strength Gemini and Virgo. Jupiter on 
thursdaie,in his chariot drawen by twoe pecockes, his coachman 
Sagitarius, his strength Pisces. Venus on fridaie, drawen in her 
chariot by twoe white doves, her coachman Cupid, her strength 
Libra and Taurus. Saturne on satterdaie, drawen in his coach 
by twoe greane dragons, his strength Capricornus and Aqua- 
rius; so that in the whoale weake they all showe themselves. 
This motion is mervelous beautifull and veary strange, and 
in my opinion adorneth more than any other parte in the 
whoale fabricke. Those rounde spotts in the twoe sides of 
the callender be the notable eclipses of the soone and moone, 
that shall happen within this thirtie twoe yeares. The rounde 
blewe, havinge the center thereof redd, is nothmge but the 
motion of an index that sheweth the minutes of the hower; 
on the sides whereof be twoe angelicall boyes, the one havinge 
an hower glasse which he toorneth every hower, the sande 
beinge emptied out in the lower parte thereof; the other ha- 
vinge a cepter in his hande whiche he liftinge up semeth as 
it weare to commaunde the clocke to stricke. The next great 
circumpherence distinguished by twenty foure howers, is an 
astronomicall instrument called the astrolabe, wherein be the 
howerly, dailie, weakly, monethly and yearly motions of the 
planets and starres; in the corners whereof be the foure ages 
of man, the foure seasons of the yeare: above this is the 
monethly course of the moone which doeth so wax and waine, 
is manifested shininge or shadowed, as the moone is in the fir- 
mament. Above this be those men which stricke the quar- 
ters, wheare the hower is resembled to the life of man, which 
hath his infancie like to the first quarter, which is strooken by 
the child ; his adolescencie resembled by the second quarter, 
which is strooke by a yooth; his manhood resembled by an 
armed souldier, whoe strikes the third quarter; and his owld 
age resembled by a graie-bearded man, whoe striketh the 
laste quarter. The hower glasse beinge nowe emptied (which 
the angelicall boye before spoken of that sitteth belowe by the 
circule of minutes held in his hand), the course of man’s age is 
by that figured to be ended, and therefore death ensueth and 
striketh the stroke on the little bell, as it weare to summon us 
to appeare before the tribunale seat of the heavenly judge, and 
sheweth that the lif is finisshed as the hower, whose droppes 
of sand be resembled to the daies, and protract our lif to our 
end, and that our period of abidinge heare is so shorte as the 
hower is in respect of eternitie. Opposite'to death is Christ 
which reviveth and raseth up to lif everlastinge; and in this 
second place is eternitie signified, whoe was before all tyme, 
figured in the pellican belowe, and shall continew after all 


LETTERS ON SCIENTIFIC SUBJECTS. 27 


eis ended. The motion whereby the nature of our Sa- 
viour is manifested is every moment to come forth out of that 
e where he is pourtracted, to signifie that he carefull 
provideth for all ages, and lovingly presenteth him selfe at all 
| es. This is, Right Worshipfull Sir, in breef, the summe of 
t which is in the fabricke of the clocke contayned, wherein 
_ lie hidden more misteries then I have manifested unto you in 
theise fewe lines, and yet so mutch hath been uttered as de- 
serveth a duble and treble consideracion, for in this so many 
divers partes is a wonderfull consent and agreement ; for heer 
the foure men doe soe distinguishe the continewaunce of 
the whole woorld, as the foure seasons doe the yeare; the 
ages doe the life of man, and the foure quarters doe the 
moone and the hower; and yeat all theise have and 
_ figured by death, all theise have originall motion by Christ, 
| which is there lif, figured forth by the pellican, and all 
| theise have been garded and maintained by our Saviour, the 
_ laste parte of the worke. ‘There is also the creation of man, 
the fall of man, and the restoringe of man, and his resurrec- 
tion, painted in the lower parte of the table, over the eclipses 
of the soonne and the moone. The cocke on the left hand 
_ dothe croe at three of the clocke in the afternoone. This was 
| ___ not devised of late, but kept in the church as a monument of 
| _antiquitie ; forintymes pastthey used, when the passion of Christ 
'_ was celebrated, to make this cocke croe at sutch tyme as they 
_ reade in the Evangelist, Peter three tymes deniall of Christe, 
__ the which sayoreth nothinge of the invention of the rest of 
_ the woorke. The other side is only an artificiall steare 
_ whereby men maie behould the conveyances of the motions 
_ within. In the mindes of the magistrates that fournisshed 
the deviser with habilitie to make shewe of his skill by mag- 
__ nificent expenses, there is to be considered a desyre to conse- 
crat the memoriall of there names to perpetuall admiration of 
succeadinge ages, imitatinge therebie the examples of many 
F kinges and princes that emptied there treasures on such he- 
 roicall woorkes. Some in buildinge of temples ; some by in- 
| ventinge of warlike engins; some by devisinge spatious and 
_ ample theatres; some by convayinge miraculously waters by 
_ aquzeductes; some by buildinge of bathes; by bridges; by 
' gardens; some by piramides; some men by obeliscy, and 
_ some by measuringe of tyme by clepsydrz, clockes and hower- 
glasses and sutch like, that to recite all the other kindes of 
inventions weare to you troublesome and to me laborious. 
The great Temple of Diana in Ephesus did contayne in length 
foure hundred and thirtie twoe feet, in breadth one hundred 
and twenty, was supported by one hundred and twenty seaven 


98 LETTERS ON SCIENTIFIC SUBJECTS. 


statly pillers, and was a buildinge twoe hundred and twenty 
yeares by the moste exquisite artizans in all Asia. The walles 
that inclosed the great citie of Babilon, built by Queen Sy- 
miramis, weare in circute sixtie miles; in heith, two hundred 
feet; in breadth fiftie; weare distinguished with twoe hun- 
dred and fiftie stately towers; in one yeares space weare 
finisshed, but by the hand of thirteen thowsand woorkmen. 
The children of Israell, that lived foure hundred and thirtie 
yeares under the slavishe servitude of the tirannicall Pharoes 
in Kgipt, weare busied cheefely in there latter tyme in work- 
inge of those stately Piramides; the commen people bakinge 
of bricke for the foundations, and the most learned amongest 
them in carvinge of stones for those hyerogliphicall misteries. 
Trajan the Emperure, as it weare in dispite of nature, made a 
stony bridge over the swifte river Ister of twenty arches, sea- 
vered by one hundred and twentie feet, in heith forty cubites, 
in breadth thirtie. The theaters at Rome weare capable of 
sixtie thowsand persons to behould, and of navis of shippes to 
present navale prelium for pleasure unto the people, Horti- 
pensiles weare no lesse admirable, that were so artificially sett 
on pillers, that they seamed to hange in the aire, and there- 
fore weare called hanginge gardens. The tombe that Arte- 
misia bwilt for the kinge of Caria is renouned through the 
whole woorld by the name of Mausole. The great Colossus 
(that was in the haven of the Ile of Rodes, was an immage of 
sutch a mervelous heith, that great shippes with all ther 
sailes, there toppes and topp gallantes, mought enter betwixt 
his legges,) is to be wondered at howe it stoode firme and im- 
movable of winde and tempest, without any shrowed, so 
many hundred yeares. Dionisius the tiran was the inventor 
of the warlicke engin called Catapulta; but first he, by pro- 
posinge infinite rewardes, assembled at Siracusa, in Sicily, the 
most rare persons for invention in all Africa and Europe. 
Archimedes did devise, by many yeares study and wonderfull 
expenses, a burninge glasse, wherewith he woold sett a fiar the 
Romaine shippes many leagues of, and handes of iron to lifte 
upp whole navies by force, and to make them as it weare flie 
in the aire. Nero did invent and caused to be bwilt a ban- 
quetinge howse in Rome, wherein the motions of the heavens, 
the conjunctions and opositions of the planettes, wear hourely 
presented unto him as he sported him self with musicall in- 
struments. Vitruvius for warlike engins is of admirable re- 
noune. And Berosus the Caldean did first devise to measure 
the tyme by an Hemicycle. Aristarchus of Samos, by a dishe 
havinge in the center thereof a strawe directed to the zenith, 
and Augustus the Emperewer in Campo Martio uppon the 


LETTERS ON SCIENTIFIC SUBJECTS. 29 


earacters in obeliscis, did discerne the shadowes, and by that 
meanes distingwisshed the howers of the daie. Papirius Cursor 
did the use of horologis at Rome: and Scipio Nascica did firste 
devid the daie into twenty foure howers by the runninge of 
water. And Boetius Severinus the philosopher did first in- 
vente those clockes wee daily use, that move by waightes and 
tourne by wheeles*. 

This catologge I alleadge to shew, that in all tymes and ages 
moste renounied princes have contended for the prise of glory, 
by inventinge rare woorkes for necessitie or pleasure, and also 
| to shewthat in all tymes andages menn have been very curious, 

and have bestowed great cost in distinguisshinge of tymes, as 
athinge that ought to be estemed moste pretious.. T'o imitat 
whose example and to exceed whose excellencie, the Senate of 
Strasbourge have caused this wonderfull fabrike to be made 
in this forme as you see, by Doctor Dassipodius, publicke 
professor of the Mathematickes, Wolkenstenius his coadju- 
tor, and Stun the painter; the renoune of whose fame as it 
is reported in moste partes of Europe, so no doupt it wil be 
perpetuated by continewaunce of tyme to all ensewinge pos- 
terities. Thus hath, Right Worshipfull Sir, my desyre to de- 
clare the forwardnes of my good will carried me perhaps farr 
beyonde the compas of my learninge, in indeavoringe to in- 
clude sutch an exquisite peece of woorke in my rude letters, 
and to contayne the statlynes of the high tower within the 
basnes and lownes of my creapinge style. But I hope you 
will easily pardon this presumption, consideringe it proceadeth 
from an obsequious mynde to procure your contentment by 
this my studious travaile. And although as it was geaven for 
advise to a temerarious weake person, that he should abridge 
some what from his rasshenes or add somethinge tohisstrength, 
if he ment to attaine any tbinge by his labour, so I maie be 
admonished that I should have with houlden some parte of my 
good will, or encreassed somewhat to my knowledge, before I 
ad undertaken the description of this fabricke, yf I did de- 
syre to make my letters acceptable to the willinge peruser 
thereof. Yet still I bwild the foundation of my compforte on 
the assured pillers of your favorable and gracious acceptaunce. 


* In the Archeologia, vol. 5, is a very interesting article on the introduction of 
clocks by Daines Barrington. A manuscript at Trinity College, Cambridge, 0. ii. 
; 32, contains another account of the Strasburgh clock, written in Latin in the year 
1590, These two accounts seem to agree very nearly with one another. 


30 LETTERS ON SCIENTIFIC SUBJECTS. 


LORD BURGHLEY’S MEMORIAL CONCERNING | 
DR. JOHN DEEF’S OPINION ON THE REFOR- — 
MATION OF THE CALENDAR. 


[MS. Lansd. No. 39, Art. 14, Orig.] 


I have perused Mr. Dee’s booke concerning his opinion for 
the reformation of the old Romaine Calender, and I have 
conferred also by speche with him at good length thearein, 
and I find his judgment resolute for the error and inconve- 
nience to have yt continued ; but he differeth in the quantetie 
of the error, for he hath made manie proofes by demonstration 
astronomicall, that the superfluous nombre of daies to be 
abridged are xj. wheare the Gregorean judgment maketh 
them to be but x. I am not skilfull in the theoreekes to de- 
sernn the pointes and minutes, but yet I am inclined to thinke 
him in the right line, for I find he maketh his roote from the 
vearie point of the nativitie of Christ in the meridian of Beth- 
lem; and the Romaines have made theire roote from the time 
of the Counsell of Nice, and, according to that, theie maie 
mainteine theare opinion. But by Mr. Dee, yt appeareth 
the error in computation grewe betwixt the radix of Christes 
Nativity and the celebration of the Nicene Counsell, which 
he proveth by a great nombre of good authorities, such as I 
think the Romanistes cannot denie. It weare good in mine 
opinion (wheareunto he also consenteth), that by hir Majesties 
order sum skilfull men in this science, as Mr. Digges and 
others, to be called owt of the Universities, might peruse his 
worke, and conferr the thinges by spech ; and though he dis- 
covereth the x. daies to be insufficient, yet he yeldeth for con- 
formitye with the rest of the world to assent to the reforma- 
tion of our Engleshe calender, with the abridgment of x. daies 
onelie; so as the trewthe be denounced to the world that yt 
ought to be xj. dayes, hoping that the trewthe will drawe the 
Romanestes and other partes of Christendome to take owt of 
their Calender hereafter the said odd daie. 

Theare appeareth great cawse to have this conference acce- 
lerated, for that it is requisite, for a secrett matter, to be re- 
formed before November; so as either everie moneth from 
Marche till November maie beare equall defalcation, or els 
sum one moneth maie bear the whole. Thus much have I 
thowght good briefuelie to deliver you mine opinion. 


LETTERS ON SCIENTIFIC SUBJECTS. 31 


THOMAS HOOD TO LORD BURGHLEY, 


[MS. Lansd, No, 101, Art. 12.) 


To the righte honorable Sir William Cecill, Knighte; Lorde 
Burleighe, Lorde Treasurer of Englande. 


Maie it please you, righte Honorable, to understande, That 
forsomuche as the maintenance of the mathematicall lecture, 
and other necessaries belonginge thereunto dependeth espe- 
ciallie upon the execution of certaine articles confirmed by the. 
right honorable the lords of her Majesties Privie Counsell con- 
cerninge the capitanes of the trained bandes in the citie of 
London, and the erectinge of a mathematicall lecture therein, 
I did therefore in humble manner request theire favorable 
letters to the Lord Maior and his bretheren for the speedie 
execution of the said articles. To my peticion I receaved this 
answeare: That it pleased the right honorable lords in my 
behalfe to directe theire letters to the Lord Maior and his 
bretheren, requestinge them to move those which had binne 
contributaries to my lecture to continew theire benevolence 
towarde the same as they had begonne. The which answere, 
Righte Honorable, as it seemed greatlie to favour my prefer- 
ment, so am I bownde to be thanckfull for the same. But 
_ consideringe that my wages dependeth not upon the contri- 
bution of anie certaine number of men, but upon the promise 
of the Lord Maior and the citie, I feared that their Honours 
_ letters so directed wolde be an hinderance to my purpose, I 
_ was bolde therefore to renew my peticion unto theire Lords, 
whereunto an answere was retorned in these wordes. That 
theire Honours were readie to grante the same, so farre forthe 
as your Honour wolde consent thereunto, wherefore my re- 
quest unto you, Right Honorable, is this, That consideringe 
my peticion containeth nothinge prejudiciall to the honour 
and profite of the commonwealth, or that hathe not by your 
Lordships hande binne adjudged convenient, and earnestlie 
requested by the whole citie, it wolde please your Lordship 
to further the same; and I doubte not but as IJ shall thincke 
myselfe bounde unto your Honour, and the rest for your 
greate and singuler favour, so you shall have just occasion to 
saie (in respecte of that good which by mine endevour shall 
arise to the common wealth) that your benefite was bestowed 
upon a painefull thanckfull and well deservinge man*. 

Your Honours, 

Most humble, 
Tuomas Hoop. 


* Towards the end of Elizabeth’s reign, there was a mathematical lecture read 


32 LETTERS ON SCIENTIFIC SUBJECTS. 


TYCHO BRAHE TO SIR THOMAS SAVELLE. 
[MS. Harl. No. 6995, Art. 40, Orig.] 


Literas tuas circa initia Septembris ad me Hamburgo per- 
scriptas, vir prestantissime eruditissimeque, misit huc claris- 
simus vir D. Doctor Winshemius, easque dum peregre in 
Seelandia absum, die 22 Novembris recepi, que mihi admo- 
dum grate erant. Nec enim insolitum quid accidit, si viri 
eruditi, in variis Europe locis utut de facie mihi ignoti, ad 
me subinde dent literas. Quod et ego vicissim per occasio- 
nem facere non supersedeo. Non tamen ita mihi ipsi placeo, 
nec tanto me dignor honore quo tu candore et benevolentia 
singulari erga me potius allectus, quam quod ejuscemodi quid 
agnoscam, me afficis. Si preesens presentem aliquando allo- 
cutus fuisses, ex quo sic aliquoties animum induxeras, equi- 
dem tuus huc accessus mihi percharus evenisset. Solent 
preter alias nationes diversas tui quoque conterranei Angli 
me quotannis, zstatis presertim tempore crebro invisere, quos 
et, uti par est, in pretio habeo, et prout cujusque fert inge- 
nium atque desiderium, libenter cum illis de re qualibet pro- 
posita confero, quot et tuum non gravatim facerem, cum ex 
literis tuis perspiciam, tanquam ex ungue Leonem, te ingenii 
acumine judicio et eloquentia przpollere, modo Atdlus atque 
Neptunus tam averso animo mihi tuum huc adventum non 
invidissent. Reddentur forté alias placatiores, nam et eos qui 
ventis atque undis preesunt, instar eorum mutabiles esse con- 
decet. Nec fera tempestas toto perdurat in anno. Dabitur 
forsan aliquando occasio, qua his faventibus et benignius aspi- 
rantibus, id quod hactenus non successit, commodius expe- 
dies. Eris mihi, ubi id evenerit, hospes apprime acceptus. 
Interim quod licet et decet, quodque a me tam obnixe expetis, 
prestare non intermittam. Mitto siquidem bina exemplaria 
libri nostri secundi de recentioribus cali phenomenis. Licet. 
enim non libenter hc a ceteris tomis, nondum typis integre 
absolutis, avello, tamen tue sincere et amice petitioni morem 
gerere volui. Habebis et reliquos, sine quibus hic pené mu- 
tilus est, quando typis nostris ad colophonem fuerint deducti. 
Interea temporis per otium hunc, quo nunc te dono, evolve, 
disquire, dijudica. Et si quid in hoc dubii, aut minus apo- 
dictice prolatum adinveneris, ingenué admone, tuamque et 
aliorum prestantium in Anglia philosophorum de singulis 
eruditam censuram, sive pro sive contra nos faciat, conquire, 


in Leadenhall Chapel; in 1631 this had been discontinued, but lectures on navi- 
gation were then read in the Blackfriars, at the house of Adrianus Marius. Stowe’s 
Chronicle by Howes, fol. Lond. 1631, p. 1080. Thomas Hood, the writer of this 
letter, was the author of a treatise on the sector, and several other scientific works. 


Se el Pre, 


ros verge 


LETTERS ON SCIENTIFIC SUBJECTS. 33 


 audacter profer, meque per literas, cum libera restituetur na- 
 vigatio, de his certiorem redde. Vale et magnificum specta- 
tissimumque virum dominum Danielem Rogersium, reginez 
_ Majestatis consiliarium atque secretarium dignissimum, (qui 
etiam legationis huc in Daniam munere functus, me cum suo 
 eomitatu aliquando invisere non est gravatus) meo nomine 
 saluta, unaque illum de mihi promisso serenissime regina 
, privilegio librario, pro quo jam aliquoties frustra ad ipsum 
_ seripsi, admone ut mature stet promissis, quo diploma illud 


_ obtineam, cum ceteris quibusdam, ab imperatore atque aliis 
_ regibus impetratis, operibus nostris preefigendum. Aut si pri- 
 yilegium illud non est missurus, indicet saltem, quod et cur 
_ id non concedatur, sicque fidem datam apud me sufficienter 
redemerit, eritque excusatus. Saluta quoque meo nomine 
_officiosé nobilissimum et excellentissum dominum Johannem 
_ Dee, quem in patriam feliciter reversum audivi, ipsique hoc 
_ Nomine congratulor, omniaque prospera opto. Nobilissimum 
ia et pariter eruditissimum mathematicum Thomam 
_ Diggesseeum* ex meo ore non insalutatum relinque, cui etiam 
ex animo faveo et bene cupio. Utrique autem horum librum 
nostrum transmissum ostende, ut et illi in eum disquirant at- 
que suam de ejus contentis sententiam liberé pronuntient. 
Quod si literis ad me datis preestiterint, ego et respondere et 
amicitiam in posterum cum illis colere atque de rebus philo- 
_ sophicis et mathematicis jucunde conferre nequaquam detrec- 
} tabo. Iterum atque iterum diu et bene vale. Dabantur Vra- 
} niburgi, calendis Decembris, anno 1590. 
| | Tycuo Brane. 
Addidi quaterna exemplaria mez effigiel nuper Amstero- 
dami cupro insculpte. Si qui sunt apud vos excellentes 
poetze, quales in foecunda et facunda vestra, et terra et vena, 
plurimos inveniri non dubito; cuperem, ut argutum aliquod 
epigramma in icona hance atque operum meorum commenda- 
tionem delectationis ergo luderent. Qua in re eruditissimus 
dominus Daniel Rogersius, suam quoque erga me probare 
posset benevolentiam modo a Reipublice serioribus negotiis 
tantillulum vacaretf. 
Clarissimo inprimisque erudito viro Domino Thome Savillo, 
Anglo, amico suo dilecto. 


ee 


* This is the same person whose letter to Lord Burghley is printed at p. 6 of the 
present volume. 

t Daniel Rogers was distinguished in the literature of his time. I have not been 
able to ascertain whether any other memorial of this application remains. A good 
portrait of Brahe’s is inserted in the Epist. Astronom. Francof. 1610, from a paint- 
ing taken when he was in his fortieth year. 


D 


primo vere, si antea ob hyemis asperitatem fieri nequeat, certo — 


os, 


at; 
ae 


34 LETTERS ON SCIENTIFIC SUBJECTS. 


JOHN BULKELEY TO THOMAS HARRIOT. 
[MS. Orig. in Sion College. ] 


Erudito viro Thome Harrioto amico suo Johannes Bulkeleus 
salutem dicit. | 

Obtemperavi tibi tandem, mi Harriote, et felici auspicio id — 
factum sit, si tacuissem mea mihi non meruissent, aut nunc — 
fortasse suo judicio perivit sueto. Non eo animo aut con- — 
silio hee scripsi, quo laudem hine mihi aliquam acquirere — 
contenderem, si vituperim effugiam voti mei compos fiam. — 
Legimus in procemio quarti [libri] Conicorum Apollonii, Co- 
nonem Samium, quem Archimedes vir acerrimi judicii propter — 
ejus singularem prudentiam summis laudibus extulit, a Ni- — 
cotele Cyrenzo tanquam non recte in demonstrationibus ver- 
satum reprehensum fuisse. Scripsit quoque Eutocius Asca- 
lonita inventa initasse Erastosthenis Nicomedem ; atque So- 
cratem, Apollonio oraculo sapientissimum judicatum, nichi- 
lominus carpebat Aristophanes. Denique Archimedi ipsi 
-quandoquidem non defuit reprehensor. Quomodo ego spe- — 
rabo me posse carere calumnia? Verum si criticorum mor- — 
sibus dilaniare in te cudetur faba, qui tua culpa, tua, inquam, 
maxima culpa, preecipua causa fuisti cur hac mea, qualia-~ 
cumque sint, in lucem perclaram prodierunt, quze antea demi 
in tuto silentii moenibus defensa latebant. Quamobrem in — 
tuam tutelam protegenda suscipias velim, quoniam tibi tuo-— 
que nomini ea dicamus tanquam amicitize que inter nos mihi 
ob virtutem solam interessit. Hisce igitur laborantibus, — 
ubi opus sit suppetias ferre (uti confido) ex humanitate tua — 
et ingenii acumine non dedignabere. Vale. Ex aulula Mona, ~ 
pridie calend. Martii, anno 1591*. 


* This letter forms a dedication to a large work by Bulkeley on the quadrature ~ 
of the circle, the original manuscript of which is in the library of Sion College, | 
and is, perhaps, the only remaining memorial of one who appears to have been an — 
ingenious mathematician, considering the time in which he lived. From this de- — 
dication it appears that Bulkeley, under the advice of Harriot, had intended to 
consign his work to the press; and the reason why the project was abandoned 
does not appear. This is also an early notice of Harriot as a mathematician; al- 
though Gabriel Harvey, in his “ Pierces Supererogation,” 4to Lond. 1593, p. 190, 
classes him as a “ profounde mathematician,” along with Digges and Dr. Dee. 


LETTERS ON SCIENTIFIC SUBJECTS. 35 


EDMUND JENTILL TO LORD BURGHLEY. 


[MS. Lansd. 77, Art. 59.) 
October Ist, 1594. 


- In all humilitie (right honorable) have I presumed, upon 
the reportes by my poore wief of your most favorable and 
‘gratious meaninge towardes my relief and release in this my 

istressed estate, by letter to solicite your lordship and to 
ieinfesse my fault unto your honor, to lay before you suche 
rutes of my studdies as maye at least attenuate the offence, 
and move compassion in your honors mynd for my delivery. 
My cryme is counterfetinge of Forren coyne not currant in 
‘this realme ; urged therunto, I doe protest, not through anye 

tious or lascivious kind of lyvinge, but through meere and 
extreame want of mayntenance to susteyne my wief in her 

g contynued child-birth sicknes, the relief of myself and 
children, buyinge of bookes, paying of debtes and triall of 
conclusions mathematicall and serviceable for my countryes 
good; the frutes and finall endes wherof, not suche as are 
common or triviall, but rare and to great use in anie state or 
comonwelth, not fytt for vulgar knowledge, I heere. moste 

bly offer in redemption of my great amisse and fault 
comitted, to bee performed within some smale tyme after my 
helth. and some mayntenance with the recovery of my 
| helth 
_ First an instrument, wherby the distance to anything, to- 
gether with the height and breadth therof, at one stacion or 
i only, shal bee obteyned. 

os second, a perpetuall motion of sufficient force to dryve 
aoty 
| The third a payer of compasses, which shall describe all 
|sortes of figures geometricall and spiral lynes, and maye, for 
| their excellencye, bee termed the Euclidean Compas. 

Howe serviceable theis three are, and espetially the two 
| first, for all kynd of services as well at sea as land in warr 
: jand peace, it is needles to dilate, when half a wourd doth 
mie your honor knowe as muche. Only this I crave in re- 

arde heerof your honorable and moste favorable meanes, 
either by warrant from your lordship and my honorable good 
|master Sir Thomas Henage, unto the Lord Maior for my 
| libertie (beinge as muche as he requireth), or otherwise to 
: quaynt her moste gratious Majestie with theis my offers to 
whome they are wholy dedicated, and of whose moste excel- 
jJent mercye and clemencye (in regarde of my soone deliverye) 
my soule is well confirmed through your honors mediacion, 
D 2 


Ae ee et a ee 


' 
t 


. 


36. LETTERS ON SCIENTIFIC SUBJECTS. 


that untymely death through sicknes and ymprisonment_ 
growinge by grief of mynd in sorrowe of my faulte prevent — 
not these my good endevors ; besides the edition of my workes | 
of perspective and fortification, such as hetherto hath not— 
byn seene the like the attaynment unto the knowledge wher-— 
of, hath byn cause of my greatest wantes, and want the only — 
cause of my offence comitted. Thus, cravinge pardon for my — 
teadious boldnes proceedinge from a troubled contrite harte, 
prayinge for your lordship’s helth in all honor and happynes, 
I moste humblye ceace 
Your honor’s poore and distressed supliant, 
Kp. JENTILL. 


To the right honorable his singuler good lord 
The lord high threasurer of England. 


INVENTIONS BY EDMUND JENTILL. 
[MS. Lansd. 113. Art. 4.] 


Invencions founde of late by Edmunde Jentill for the forte- 
Syinge of Her Majestie’s Navye and the benefitt of this: 
countrey. : 


A device whereby twoe menne maye be sufficient to waye 
the waytiest anker in her Majestie’s navye with greater ex-: 
pedition then it is nowe done with the nomber nowe used. _ 

The like device is founde, for the hoystinge of the mayne 
yarde with the like expedition. 

A perpetuall motion is allso founde out of sufficient force 
to drive a mill in any standinge water, or quike springe, which 
maie alsoe be converted to sundrie other uses comodious fo 
all estates, which have hetherto byn supposed to be unprac- 
tyzable. 

A device wonderfull strange is alsoe founde out whereb 
a vessell of burden maie easilye and safely by guided bot 
against the winde and tide *. 


* Nothing is more easy than to picture the results of supposititious inventions 
on paper; a remarkable instance may be seen in the “ Famous Historie of Fri 
Bacon,” edited by W. J. Thoms, p. 24-5:—‘“ Art oftentimes doth those thin 
that are impossible to armes, which I will make good in some few examples. 
will speak onely of things performed by art and nature, wherein shall be nothin 
magical: and first by the figuration of art, there may be made instruments 
navigation without men to rowe in them, as great ships to brooke the sea, onl 
with one man to steere them, and they shall sayle far more swiftly than if th 
were full of men: also chariots that shall move with an unspeakable force, wit 


LETTERS ON SCIENTIFIC SUBJECTS. 37 


HENRY MARSHALL TO LORD BURGHLEY. 
(MS. Lansd. 101, Art. 16. Orig.] 


Right Honorable,—Forasmuch as I have of late devised 
two rare inventions, the which may be profitable to my con- 
_trye, and damageable to the enemyes thereof; I thought it 
my dutie (having found your honour alwayes my especiall 
_ good lord) to offer the discoverie of the same to your lord- 
ship before anye other. The which if your honour shall 
_thinke worthie, maye be then imparted unto Her Majestie. 
' The first is an engine, whereby the walle of anye towne or 
castle maye be defended from the force of anye canon: and 
_ the other is an engyne, which shall breake the araye of anye 
_ battell being readie to joyne: the which engynes are easilie 
_ made, and yett neither verie chargeable nor paynefull to trans- 
porte. And because I understand your honour to be de- 
lighted with such rare inventions, I thought it good to make 
_ modelles of the same, whereby your lordship may the easelier 
conceave my intention, and the better judge of the benefitt 
and sequell pretended. Thus fearing to be troublesome to 
our honour, and craving pardon for this my rashe boldnes, 
wish your honour good health and long life to God’s plea- 
sure. 
Your honour’s most humble in all duetifulnes, 
| Henry MarsHau.tu. 
To the right Honorable Sir William Cecill, Knight, 
| Lord Burghley, Lord High Treasurer of England, 
London, the 1st of June, 1595. 


EMERY MOLINEUX TO LORD BURGHLEY. 
[MS. Lansd. 101, Art. 17. Orig.] 


1596. 


Right Honorable,—As I have ever receaved, so I ever 
acknowledge your honorable favors towardes me, and where 
I have longe endevored to be a helpinge member to my 
contry (as God enhableth me, by whome every good and 
profitable thinge is effected,) so havinge by Him, by appa- 


out any living creature to stirre them. Likewise, an instrument may be made to 

fly withall, if one sit in the midst of the instrument, and doe turne an engine, by 

which the wings being artificially composed, may beat ayre after the manner of a 
flying bird.” 


38 LETTERS ON SCIENTIFIC SUBJECTS. 


rent approbation, performed matter of service worthy to be 
imbraced, I cannot but in all duty not onely acquaynt your — 
honnour therewith, but yelde me redy to subject myselfe — 
and it to your honorable disposition. And althoughe I can | 
not so demonstrate the substance thereof as were fitt your — 
honnor should apprehend, I must yelde myselfe to your 
lordship’s good conceipt, assuringe your honnour that the ~ 
service shal be suche (might it please Her Majestie to make — 
use of it,) as former tymes have not attayned unto. The ~ 
effectes whereof I leave either to the judgment of some that — 
your honnour shall appoint to surviewe the same, or to the — 
information of the right honorable Sir William Knowles, Sir — 
Henry Knyvett, Sir John Stanhopp, Mr. Thomas Knyvett, | 
and others whoe have been alredy partakers of the same by | 
viewe, humbly prayinge your honnour to accept myne ende- 
vors, and to contynue your honorable favours no further then — 
I intend my desires to doe your lordship and your’s myne > 
uttermost service. | 
Your lordship’s ever at comaunde, 

Emery MO.LINEvx. 

To the Right Honorable the Lord Burleighe, 
Lord Highe Treasurer of England. 


WILLIAM LOWER TO THOMAS HARRIOT. 


[MS. Addit. 6789. Orig. ] 
Ira ’venti, March 4th, 1611. 


Sir,—I never loved huntinge till you furnished mee with — 
dogs, I will henceforward prove another Nemrode ; indeed I 
sought both arkes and tangents in the tables by proportion — 
onlie ; so, in a worde, you have made me see my faulte; in 
two or three more you have taughte me to amende it; onlie 
your curre dog Petiscus will not come into my sighte: but 
after a weekes vaine anger and points in seekinge for him, I © 
found at last it was not the poore curres faulte, but Mr. Bills, — 
that, sendinge me the second edition of the Origonometria, — 
sente me onlie the tables; so as turninge the pages 75, 76, 
78, 79, of the first edition (which is all I have) I found no 
such thinge as you sited, nor no such examples as you added. — 
This is not the first time that Bill hath sent me imperfect 
copies; I pray let him understand so much. So you see I 
am defeated of the curre dog, savinge what I pick out of 


LETTERS ON SCIENTIFIC SUBJECTS. 39 


_ your letter, which indeed is not enough to give me satisfac- 
tion. Let Kitt, when he goes next to London, speeke to Bill, 
or att the Blackfriers, for a perfect copie of Petiscus; my 
brother the captaine will send it to me speedilie. The 

touch that you give of your doctrine of differences or trian- 
gular nombers, .... me of them, wherin to understand 
- somethinge, I will one day bee a begger unto you. Your 
_ dog, that hunts by the sines onlie, and I am growen familiar, 
and he is an excellent dog; but your she bitch hath no fellow 
_ for. . . ., onlie she is slow; I had not lost hir, but knew hir | 
_ goodnesse wel enough: the reason why I did nott use her in 
the former workes, was because, beinge in way of calculation 
__ by the tables onlie in that practise, I endevored to cleare that 
_ way of all rubbs; also because I conceaved it to be the short- 
_ est, I hastned (so greedie was my desire) to see the issue of 


) your triangular kinde. 
I need not bee so curious to send you my doubts in indi- 
| viduo, for howsoever you satisfie me in private as you have 
done now, nevertheless, because you require it, I have sente 
‘them in two supplements, the one unto my letters that you 
have alreadie, the other unto thes, which, unlesse you had 
_ remembered me of, I should have omitted againe. 
__ My worke is crowned now you allow of it, and indeed ther 
} wanted in mee nether will nor industrie to accomplish it, nor 
in you will nor skill to instruct me in the sacred wayes of 
arte; be you therfore ever of me unconquerablie respected, 
or be I not att all. 
| You have recomforted mee much to intimate that anie 
| greate difference in my workes will discover a farther mis- 
terie ; for I was almost dismaied to find thes second observa- 
| tions give an Aphelie different for the former 3 or 4 degrees. 
Of this later worke I send you all the numbers given and 
} found, and had also of manie more by this time, if the impos- 
| sible issue of this last worke had not stayed my proceedinge till 
Ireceaved your censure of it. As you direct me I will proceede 
to doe them all, for I am growen verie experte in this calcu- 
lation. I did not mistake that « 6 in the diagramme I sent 
you was double the eccentricitie, and therfore, before the re- 
| cepte of your letter, in this second worke I had placed 6 att 
| the center, and att the centrorde, not onlie that « 8 mighte 
| still remaine with Kepler the single eccentricitie, but to make 
i) it also corresponde with your vice royall probleme beare with 


\ of 
a af) 


40 LETTERS ON SCIENTIFIC SUBJECTS. 


this imitation. Concerninge the Joveall starres I writte no- — 
thinge of them last, because I had nothinge to writte; for in- — 
deede, although both I and the yonge philosopher att Han- — 
besbrooke have often and in verie cleare nights (when Pre- — 
sepe was most plaine to bee seene without the cylinder) ; 
when wee, I say, have often diligentlie observed Jupiter, wee — 
could never see anie thinge; I impute it to'the dullnesse of © 
my lighte, for onlie with your greate glasse I could se them ~ 
in London. 

That you have made so manie exellent observations of them — 
I am most glad of, for you have gotten the starte of all im li- © 
mitinge ther periods. . 

Ther periods are verie merveilous, especiallie that of Jovi 
proximus, whos scituation also is no lesse merveilous, beinge — 
not one diameter of Jupiter of from him. Of thes thinges 
and thos other mirabilia que indies juvenis, I longe to bee — 
with you to discourse of them. My wiffe is well. Now you — 
know all my comfortes. I have lost my second boy also, and — 
wel neere eighty catle of the murraine, and the die still; now 
you know all my discomfortes and losses. Farewell, and lett — 
not the hugenesse of this missive discourage you from reed- 
inge of it; doe it at leisure and by peeces accordinge to your — 
best opportunities, and sometimes use the power you have in — 
me, which is to dispose of mee accordinge to the utmost of — 
all or anie of my abilities, 

Your faithfull frind, 
Wiuiiam Lower. 


By the helpe of your dogs, I will revew all thos workes of 
anie that exhibite the distance in the ellipses, equal or neer- — 
est to the same distance found before (for the workes uppon 
the former positions of ¢ in the eccentricke, which were 
onlie to find out this, I thinke you care not for); and when I 
have perfected them, I will send them unto you, with all the © 
numbers given and found, whether the quesite consent or no, 
since you so require ‘it. 


LETTERS ON SCIENTIFIC SUBJECTS. 41 


WILLIAM LOWER TO THOMAS HARRIOT. 


[MS. Addit. 6789. Orig.] 
Ira’ venti, April 13th, 1611. 

| I so overwhelmed you the last time with a longe letter as 
it is just I should make you amends now with one as shorte. 
_ To send you none at all (which perchance had bene best, 
 consideringe the use you have of all your time) I could not 
_ consent unto, out of the addiction and delight I have to bee 
still conversinge with you; therefore I will onlie signifie how 
it is with us,and so an end. My course of calculation I have 
_ stopte untill I heare from you; the two greate causes of my 
_ stay I declared in my last letters. I fell since into Vieta’s 
_ last probleme of his second apendicle, Apol. Gal.*, and com- 
_ pared his way with yours that you last gave me: but to con- 
} fesse a truth I can have my will of nether; and the probleme 
__appeares to me not universall, but requires determination ; 
for let the da given have the same sides ab, ac, that Vieta’s 
hath, and lett v' s’ be the same that Vieta gives; now I will 
| give a A that shall have thes sides, so as it shal bee impossi- 
ble to find anie pointe from whence lines drawen unto the 
corners be in the given rate, and that is by giving a A with 
the same sides ab, ac, but in such position as the < bac be 
> or <, then Vieta’s < bac, in such measure as Vieta’s two 
circles doe nether cut nor touch. This rubbe put me out of 
_ this course, wheruppon | betooke me to your problemes for 
_ the distinguishinge of the sides of A!*’, whether the summe 
} or difference of the sides and the angle adjacente or contained 
| with the other side were given in this. I proceed still with 
much pleasure and satisfaction. I have also putt in order all 
thos propositions which you also gave me, but I had copied 
in lose papers and with ill diagrammes, so that all the thinges 
stand well; and so I thanke God doe we also, excepte my 
| catle, which have al this winter bene persecuted with the 
| murraine; since Christmas verie neere I have lost 100 beastes, 
—Vieta’s sacrifices to the witch Melutina for the invention 
of one probleme. But I skarce keepe my promise with you. 

Farewell. I am all yours. 


Wixuiam Lower. 
To his especial good frind, Mr. Thomas 
Harriott, deliver thes. 


* The Apollonius Gallus of Vieta was first published in 1600, and contains a 
restoration of the lost treatise on tangencies, which Pappus describes as forming 
part of the rozos avadvopevos. See the article Apollonius in the New General 
Biographical Dictionary, which was written by the editor of this volume. The 
problem which Lower refers to is one of the most general in the series. 


| most, to wit, the squaringe of the circle, the dublinge of the a 


a < 


42 LETTERS ON SCIENTIFIC SUBJECTS. 


WILLIAM LOWER TO THOMAS HARRIOT. 


[MS. Addit. 6789. Orig.] 
Ira’ venti, Friday, July 19th, 1611. 


Since you incourage me so much I will proceede in thos © 
calculations of ¢, and as I finish anie I will send them unto | 
you; indeed to find the issueso..... and in the later so — 
impossible to be reconciled, had utterlie discouraged me, but | 
that now by your letter I perceave ther may bee good use | 
made even of ther discordance, therfore of this I will say no © 
more till I send you more. The leasure that the countrie life — 
affordeth us here, hath given me meanes to run over manie © 
things since I left the course of calculation, but amongst — 
others the 3 vexations of scientificall mortals hath held me 


cube, and the philosopher’s stoone. From the first I am — 
come of handsomelie enough, and have made myselfe much — 
sporte in the discoverie of mine owne parallogismes, but in 
the later I sticke still, and am like to make you sporte here. — 
I come fairelie of, but indeed I have here much otiwm, and — 
therefore I may cast awaye some of it in vaine pursuites, 
chusinge alwayes rather to doe somethinge worth nothinge — 
then nothinge at all. How farre I had proceeded in this, I — 
ment now to have given you an account, but that the reporte — 
of the unfortunate Erle’s relapse into calamitie makes me be- — 
leive that you are enough troubled, both with his misfortunes 
and my lady’s troubles; and so a discourse of this nature 
would be unseasonable. Neverthelesse, give me leave to 
crave a worde or two in answere of thes doubts, which I will 
beesilie propound as followeth :— . 

1. First whether © and « be bodies so difficulte to be | 
dissolved as alchemists affirme, I meane by dissolution (as I — 
thinke they doe), that they must bee petrifyed and distilled ? 

2. If they may bee dissolved, whether with one simple alone — 
or with manie? 

3. If they may be dissolved and petrifyed, whether ther — 
rectifyed partes, beinge conjoyned againe, will be multiplied — 
in virtue ? 

4, And lastlie, that which should have bene asked first, an | 
sit elixir? 

But at this time, this much is to much. I am sorrie to 
heare of the new troubles ther, and pray for a good issue of 
them, especiallie for my ladie’s sake and her fine litle ones. 
So for the presente I rest, as of old, Your true frind, 

Wiuiiam Lower. 
To his especiall good frind, Mr. Thomas 
Harriott, att Sion. 


4 
x 
ie 
* 

. ‘ : 
y 
a 
. 

; 
5, 


LETTERS ON SCIENTIFIC SUBJECTS, 43 


_ THOMAS AYLESBURIE TO THOMAS HARRIOT. 


[MS. Addit. 6789. Orig.] 
Margett, April 15th, 1613. 


Good Mr. Harriotts,—Bycause I have no other newes to 
send you, you shall only receave the bare relacion of our 


- voyage from Chatham to Margett att the North Forland, 


which I can tell you in breiffe, though it was to us (new sea- 
men) very tedious. For wee went on board the sixt of April, . 
and are but now arrived att the Foreland the 15., which you 
will say is very longe, but that you know the danger of the 
sands, and contrarie winds too, if yours att Sion agree with 
ours att sea. I have learned here certaine strange words 
amonge our mariners, which to interpret will require some 
tyme. If we had bene at Vlushinge, I mought perhaps have 
told you more, but I could forbeare writinge to you noe 
longer, though to little purpose, savinge only to lett you un- 
derstand that wheresoever I am, I am bound to remember 
you, and soe rest 
Your very loyteringe, 
but lovinge skollar, 
Tuomas AYLESBURIE. 


I must not forgett to tell you, your glasses have fitted my 
Lord excellentlie well; and soe, as I feare you will leese them © 
both, but not without your owne consent, I have noe aucto- © 
ritie to promise till you give leave*. 


JOHN RUDSTON TO THOMAS HARRIOT, 


[MS. Addit. 6789. Orig.] 
June 9th, 1615. 


Sir,—As by experience I have found your singular hu- 
maintie by our late conferences, to make good the noble fame 
of your great learning, so hath itt emboldened me by this my 
letter, to request that you would send me word by this bearer 
what the variation of the needle is about Mosco. For at this 
present I have such an ympediment fallen into my toes, that 
I cannot walke abroade, otherwise I had beene the presenter 


* Aylesburie is frequently mentioned as one of the scientific circle of Briggs, 
Harriot, Warner, and others. Some of his astronomical observations are preserved 
in MS. Birch, 4408, and are, as far as I know, the only remaining memorials of 
his attachment to science. 


44 LETTERS ON SCIENTIFIC SUBJECTS. 


of this my request unto you myselfe, which, if it might have 
beene, I should then have moved some other questions, viz. 
whether it is probable that the variation can be in any place 
of the world 180 degrees, or the north point of the needle 
stand directly to the south. Allso whether a ‘shippe sailing 
right east or west by the compasse, keepes upon a parallell, 
as the common received opinion amongst maryners is, which 
I thinke not, because the east and west of the compasse is a 
tangent to the parallell, but how little soever it so continues 
in sailing, it is a portion or arch of the great circle of the east 
and west, and therefore (I conceive) cannot but decline from 
the parallell. But ceasing to trouble you with these manner 
of questions, I crave perdon for this my boldnes, resting 
Att your command, 
Joun Rupston*. 


To his very good frend, Mr. Haryott in 
Black-fryars, be these delivered. 


THOMAS AYLESBURIE TO THOMAS HARRIOT. 


[MS. Addit. 6789. Orig.] 
Newmarkett, January 19th, 1618-9. 


Sir,—Though I have bene yet soe little a while att New- 
markett, that I have not any thing of moment to ymport, yet 
I thinke it not amisse to write a bare salutations, and let you 
know, that in theise wearie journeys I am oftentimes com- 
forted with the remembrance of your kind love and paynes 
bestowed on your loytering scholar, whose little credit in the 
way of learning is allwaies underpropped with the name of 
soe worthie a maister. The comet being spent, the talke of 
it still runnes current here. The King’s Majesty before my 
comming spake with one of Cambridg called Olarentia (a 
name able to beget beleefe of some extraordinarie qualities), 
but what satisfaction he gave I cannot yet learne; here are 
papers out of Spayne about it, yea and from Roome, which I 
will endeavour to gett, and meane that you shall partake of 
the newes as tyme. 

Cura ut valeas et me ames, who am ever trulie and unfayn- 
edly yours att command, 

Tuomas AYLESBURIE. 


To my right woorthie frend, Mr. Thomas 
Harriot, att Syon, theise. 


_* An astronomical treatise by John Rudston on the “ great conjunction of Ju- 
piter and Saturn” in 1623, is preserved in MS. Harl. 5211. 


he 
wy 
ot 
at 
| 
i 
2 
‘4 
i 
4 
4 
Ny 
4 
? 
. 
i 


LETTERS ON SCIENTIFIC SUBJECTS. 45 


THOMAS HARRIOT TO THE DUKE OF 
NORTHUMBERLAND. 


[MS. Harl. 6002.1 
Syon, June 13th, 1619. 

Sir,—When Mr. Warner and Mr. Hues were last at Sion, 
it happened that I was perfecting my auntient notes of the 
doctrine of reflections of bodies, unto whom I imparted the 
mysteries thereof, to the end to make your lordship ac- 
quainted with them as occasion served. And least that some 
particulars might be mistaken or forgotten, I thought best 
since to set them down in writing, whereby also nowe at 
times of leasure, when your minde is free from matters of 
greater waight, you may thinke and consider of them, if you 
please. It had been very convenient, I confess, to have 
written of this doctrine more at large, and particularly to 
have set downe the first principles, with such other of ele- 
mentall propositions, as all doubtes might have been pre- 
vented; but my infirmitie is yet so troublesome, that I am 
forced, as well that as other traits, to let alone till time of 
better abilitie. In the meane time I have made choyce of 
these propositions, in whose explication you shall find, I 
hope, the summe of all that of this argument is reasonable to 
be delivered. And if any doubtes doe arise either of the 
hypothesis therein used, or of the concomitants and conse- 
quences therein also intimated, although upon due considera- 
tion onely they may be resolved, yet because I am beforehand 
in consideration of these matters, I shall be ready when I 
have notice of them to give your lordship full satisfaction for 
your ease. And seeing that my purpose, God willing, is 
within a few days to see your lordship, I cease from more 
wordes, resting, &c.* 


T. Harrior. 


* The Harl. MSS., generally ascribed to Harriot, and even by the late Professor 
Rigaud, are in the handwriting of Sir Charles Cavendish. In MS. Harl. 6083 is 
a paper in the autograph of Harriot, “de numeris triangularibus,” which appears 
to have hitherto escaped the notice of his biographers. According to Aubrey, the 
Duke of Northumberland gave Harriot a pension of £400 per annum, and to Ro- 
bert Hues and Walter Warner he gave £40 (Lives, p. 368). Hues was the author 
of a popular little work, de usu globorum, which passed through several editions, 
and was also translated into English. I do not know whether a Mr. Hues, who 
is mentioned in MS. Harl. 4728, p.5, as having been a chaplain at the Bermudas, 
be the same person. 


46 LETTERS ON SCIENTIFIC SUBJECTS. 


SAMUEL TURNER TO THOMAS HARRIOT. 


[MS. Addit. 6789. Orig. ] 

Sir,—These shall request you to forgive me my absence _ 

untill to morrowe; then I shall give you a more particular 

accounte of my discourse with Mayerne. In the meane time, 

I shall lett you knowe that he cannot possibly com to Lon- 

don, thoughe he have manny occasions to invite him to it, 

but he desiers much to see you there; but betweene this and 

twesday he will send you, under his hand, the methode that 

he wolde advise you in the cure*. Tomorrowe I shall see 
you myselfe. In the meane time, I remaine 

Your assured frende, 
Sam. TuRNER. 


To his very good frende, Mr. Hariot, give these. 


HENRY BRIGGS TO THOMAS LYDYAT. 


[MS. Bodl. 313. Orig.] 


Good Mr. Lydiat,—My desire was to have seen you here 
this Act, and to have enjoyed your company and conference 
about our common business, the furthering of such as desire 
to understand the mathematics, and to have desired you to 
have holpen me to Origanus, whereof I should have some 
continual use. I pray you therefore send it me safe, and 
leave it for me, if I be not in town, with Mr. Crane of New 
College, my very good friend, or when you think good, that 
at my coming home I may not fail to have it. I am still at 
my logarithms, and can neither finish them to my mind nor 
let them alone. If your calling, being of so high a nature, 
would give you leave seriously to intend other business, I 
should intreat you to strive to get out your meditations and 
great pains, and to demonstrate every thing as you go, with- 
out which I think you cannot have that acceptance and ap- 
plause that your great pains have deserved. But we that 
have no such eminent business may be busied about these 


* Harriot died on the 2nd of July, 1621, of a cancerous ulcer in the lip. 1 
give this short letter as a biographical illustration. In the same volume are drafts 
of two letters from Harriot to his physicians, detailing the nature of his complaint, 
and dated in 1614 and 1615, which shows that he must have been harassed with 
this disease for some years. Theodore Mayerne, mentioned in this note, was a 
very eminent physician at the time; but it does not appear to be generally known 
that several volumes of medical collectanea in his autograph are preserved in the 
Cambridge Public Library. 


LETTERS ON SCIENTIFIC SUBJECTS. 47 


trifles in respect, though in themselves they deserve to be of 
good account. Thus wishing you all happiness and success 
_ to your liking, I take my leave. 
: Your very assured loving friend, 
Henry Briaas. 
from Merton Coll: this 11 July, 1623. 


THOMAS LYDYAT TO HENRY BRIGGS. 


[MS. Bodl. 313.] 


Mr. Briggs,—There was delivered to me yesterday, in the 
afternoon, at Banbury, by one of my neighbour ministers, a 
letter from you bearing date the 11 of July, i. e. Friday was 
-sennenet, which he said was delivered to him yesterday was 
_ sennenet, the morrow after the Act. And touching that you 
write therein about your Origanus, for which I thank you, 
and your Kepler: because you signified you were likely to 
be from home, I have written to Mr. Crane of New College, 
with whom you wished me to leave them in your absence, 
and sent money to buy others of the same for me, or rather 
for yourself, because, as I told you, yours were somewhat 
bruised and wronged by my carriage, and peradventure might 
be more in the recarriage. 
Now whereas you renew your motion of demonstrating, 
thereto I answer still, as before, bene mones. And whenso- 
ever you or any man else from generality shall proceed to 
} a specifying of any assertion of mine not sufficiently 
_ demonstrated and proved according to the nature thereof, | 
_ will, by God’s grace, do my best endeavour to demonstrate 
and prove it better. But I hold not a diagramme the only 
| way and means of demonstrating, nor so generally necessary 
| as you seem to urge. To give you an instance; I met the 
_ other day at London, with Lansbergius his Progymnasmata 
Astronomiz restituta, where in the 10 pag. applying the 
) sun’s parallaxe to Hipparchus his A‘%quinoctial observations, 
_ to make them serve his turn, he sets down a diagramme to 
_ demonstrate that the true vernal equinox is sooner, and the 
_ true autumnal later than the apparent, in regard of the paral- 
_ laxe, which to me seems superfluous. For having granted 
that the parallaxe makes the sun seem lower than truth, he 
} that cannot thereupon conceive that, in his ascent, he attains 
| the vernal sooner than he seems to attain it, and contrarywise 
in his descent he seems to attain the autumnal sooner than 


48 LETTERS ON SCIENTIFIC SUBJECTS. 


he doth attain it; and consequently the vernal true must 
needs be sooner, and the autumnal true later than the appear-— 
ing: say I, he that cannot conceive the necessity hereof” 
without a diagramme, is a verier dunce than myself, and not — 
far from that itching morbo demonstrandi that some have 
complained of before me. In a word, I hold it as absurd to ~ 
require diagrammes where they are needless, as not to put © 
them where is need. And if there be any that will not look — 
upon my writings for want of diagrammes, they may look ~ 
beside them, and they will for me. 

Further to acquaint you with my studies, I have within — 
this twelvemonth, since my last being at Oxford, scribled out — 
three inchoate and imperfect treatises of astronomy : the first, — 
of the obliquity of the zodiak in our age, which repulsing — 
the insensible inobservable parallaxe, and the imaginary re- 
gular refraction obtruded by Tycho, I find with Regiomon-— 
tanus and the Landgrave, to be 234 degrees at the most: the 
second, of the sun’s apparent anomaly and eccentricity, 
which I have by many observations confirmed to be accord- 
ing as I before supposed, 183 days, and 3333, whereof the 
radius is 100,000; with the greatest prosthapheresis, igr. 54 
str. 42 sec.: the third is of the place of the Sun’s Apogzeum 5 
for the reversing whereof to the Adstine Solstice and begin- 
ning of Cancir, I have with much labour found out above 
fifty good observations of Waters, the Landgraves, Byrgius — 
his, and Tycho’s own last Bohemicks. But speed these as 
they may, with diagrammes or without, I am resolved against 
the bringing in of the Gregorian year and calendar into our 
country, to oppose my great Period or Annus Magnus; and, 
with God’s help, to maintain against whatsoever Jesuit or 
Papist ; and in regard of the contempt and disgrace that hath 
been offered my poor self and it, to stand for a reward of my 
pains in finding or restoring of it. But haste breaks off this” 
idle talk. I was even chiding ripe with my neighbour mi-_ 
nister for keeping your letter so long in his hand. I know 
not whether he doubted me to be the man to whom it was 
meant, because you endorsed it to Alkerton in Buckingham- 
shire. Indeed my direct way to Alkerton from London, 
whence I came upon Friday was sennenet, the 11th of July, 
which day your letter bears date, is to Ailesbury, and so all 
along through Buckinghamshire; but Alkerton, my native 
soil and dwelling-place, is in the utmost skirt of Oxfordshire 
northward, as I have heretofore, although not demonstrated, 
yet declared without a diagramme in mine Astronomical 
Epistle, a copy whereof I remember I gave you. And from 
thence at this time, I thank God, in health, I take leave of 


LETTERS ON SCIENTIFIC SUBJECTS. 49 


_ you; the 23 of Julian July, and 4th of ours, on Wednesday 
Morning, 1623. 
Yours, Tuomas Lypyar. 


THOMAS MAN TO THOMAS LYDYAT. 


[MS. Bodl. 313, Orig.] 
April 19th, 1625. 


_ Sir,—In your letter, written to Mr. Crane, and dated the 
23rd of July, 1623, you made mention of a manuscript, which 
was a paraphrase of Ptolomie’s Almagest, and extant in our 
_Library*: out of which you desired to have copied out the 
beginning of the third book so far as to those words answer- 
‘ing the Greek touvrwv & ovtws eyovtav, &c., together with the 
| marginal notes, and if there were ought else to be found either 
in the beginning, or end thereof, or any where else concerning 
e antiquity and author of it. To give you satisfaction 
herein, Mr. Warden hath taken great care and pains; for he 
hath employed one of our fellows in copying it out, and hath 
transcribed it himself. You shall receive both the copies by 
the bearer hereof, Mr. William Griffith; but I fear neither of 
them will answer your expectation. For first, whereas you 
‘suppose this manuscript to be a paraphrase of Ptolomy, it 
“appears plainly by the same book being extant in the library 
otf All Souls’ College, that it is only a mere translation. In 
the preface of which book, after a strong commendation of 
this Ptolomy and his work, there is some mention made of 


| this translation. ‘The words, because they are a sufficient 
) proof hereof, and will satisfy your demand concerning the 
author and antiquity of it, 1 have sent you as I find them at 
) the end of the preface; and they are these: Liber hic precepto 
) Maimonis regis Arabum, qui regnavit in Baldath, a Alahazer 
1 jilio Josephi filii Matte Arismetici, et Sergio filii Elbe Yplano, 
anno 12 et 2000 Secte Sarracenorum translatus est; qui 
| quidem liber est Magnus dictus Almagesti, quem Bartholomeus 
| Bheleudensis de scientia stellarum, et motuum, qui sunt in 
| ceelo, conscripsit. The same translation, but without this 
| preface, is extant in the same Library, excus. a Petro Liech- 
| tenstein, Colon. Venetiis, 1515. Again, that clause which you 
) aim at especially, as I understood by Mr. Doctor Bainbridge, 


. ee aT RR OEE mS Se oe 
= a — ° . 


|. _* The manuscript here referred to is probably that mentioned in Bernard's 
| Catalogue (fol. Oxon. 1697, p. 37.) under the title of “‘ Ptolomai almagestum ex 
) Arabica in Latinam linguam versum.” This forms No. 281 of the manuscripts in 
|) the library of New College. 
. E 


50 LETTERS ON SCIENTIFIC SUBJECTS. 


and which in our manuscript is thus in the text, st in consi- 
derationibus decepti fuerimus in quarta diet, ut sit inter ipsam 
et suam differentiam quarta diet; this clause, I say, 1s not 
found in the manuscript or printed book of All Souls; in the 
printed book not at all; and in the MS. ’tis only in the mar- 
gin thus: wt sit inter ipsam et suam differentiam quarta diet. 
Other diversities of reading in All Souls’ MS. you shall find 
noted in the margin of one of these copies. As for the mar- 
ginal notes in our MS., Mr. Warden hath with great labour 
transcribed them ; they being written in a very small charac- 
ter, and full of abbreviations. This is all I thought good to 
acquaint you with concerning this matter. If you shall de- 
sire to be farther certified in any special point out of this MS., 
you shall find me (besides others) as willing to perform at any 
time, as now to promise my best furtherance therein; and so 
I leaving you to God’s protection, rest 
Your friend, 
Tuomas Man. 


THOMAS LYDYAT TO THOMAS MAN. 


[MS. Bodl. 313.] 
Alkerton, May 12th, 1625. 


Sir,—Touching the letter I received from you, dated April 
the 19th, almost three weeks since, together with the tran- 
script out of the Latin paraphrase of Ptolemy, as 1 termed it 
in my letter, wherein I desired it to be sent me almost two 
years agone, then deeming it a matter of no greater moment 
or difficulty, but that I might easily have obtained it within 
two or three days; whereas you write, you fear neither of the 
copies will answer mine expectation: truly mine expectation 
thereof was no greater than I signified in my letter, and had 
before set forth in print, and given copies thereof into your ~ 
library, that you needed not to be ignorant of the matter. | 
But I must confess it fell out very greatly contrary to mine ~ 
expectation, that it was so long differred, which I imagined — 
might have been so soon obtamed; and that made me at — 
length the more earnestly to urge not only to others of your — 
fellows, my kind friends, according as I met with them, but 
in the end also to your worthy, and by me accordingly re-— 
spected, Mr. Warden himself; I say the more earnestly and — 
almost obstinately to urge that which in the beginning I did — 
not so much respect : because I began to suspect, that not the | 
difficulty of the matter, but some sinister surmise arising upon | 


LETTERS ON SCIENTIFIC SUBJECTS. 51 


the impairing of my credit amongst you was the cause of the 
differring of it so long, contrary to, I will not say, your pro- 
mise, but my expectation. Wherein I accounted myself not 
a little wronged, yet not by you, but by some other, by whose 
means I had been so much discredited amongst you of that 
excellent society ; whose good opinion of me I have ever yet 
esteemed, and so shall esteem ever while I live, as one of my 
greatest worldly comforts. 

Now for your reasons why you fear your transcripts will 
not answer mine expectation: first because it appears plainly 
to be only a mere translation which I wayponed) to be a para- 
phrase: I termed it so by reason of the clauses here and 


| there inserted more than the text, and for illustration of the 


text, which is the property of a paraphrase ; and I thought I 
might the boldlier so term it because Scaliger had likewise 
termed it before me, namely, in his Tract. de Emend. Temp., 
pag. 370, calling both the author Paraphrasten Arabem, aS 
the translation itself, Paraphrasin. As for the words 

transcribed out of the end of the preface of All Souls’ MS. to 
satisfy my demand concerning the author and antiquity of 
it: the antiquity of the Arabique was no part of my demand 
or doubt: as having seen the same long since, not only in the 
forealleged place of Scaliger, but before in Christman’s Ap- 
pendix to Alfrugan, pag. 471, out of a MS. of the Palatine 
Library: neither yet the antiquity of the first Latin transla- 
tion out of the Arabique: which, out of the same place, and 
also otherwise, is sufficiently known to have been procured 


_ by the Emperor Frederick the Second, sirnamed Siculus: 


but my demand was concerning the antiquity of your own 
particular copy of that translation. Nevertheless you have 
done well that you have transcribed those words touching the 
Arabic, and thank you for it. 

Concerning the second cause of your fear, namely the 
clause that Mr. Dr. Bainbridge gave you to understand I did 
especially aim at: neither did I ever tell him so much, nor 
any man else, neither is it true: neither doth that paraphras- 
tical insertion, being either wholly or partly omitted in other 
MSS. or printed copies, make much either for or against the 
goodness of your own. But the clause which I did indeed 
especially aim at, and in regard whereof chiefly I did and do 
term your old Latin translation of the Almagest a paraphrase, 
is that immediately following those words cited by me in the 
top of the 32nd page of my Astronomy epistle, a circulo ad 
circulum [antequam demonstraret|, have both your tran- 
scripts: but as I have read it heretofore, because I could 


} make no sense of the other, and thereupon made an annota- 


rR 2 


an 


52 LETTERS ON.SCIENTIFIC SUBJECTS. 


tion, which some of my learned friends have seen almost two 
years agone: ad quem, or juxta quem, or quod dirigent con- 
siderationes positas. Touching your two transcripts, I un- 
derstand the fairer of them to be Mr. Warden’s own hand- 
writing : for which I request you to return him from me many 
dutiful thanks ; withal signifying unto him that I had not so 
little wit or manners either, as to wish himself to be at such  — 
pains: but used his name in my letter only because I supposed 
he knew best whom to employ about it. Concerning the ~ 
point in controversy about the confounding or dividing of two 
of Hipparchus his vernal observations, I pray you return my 
commendations to your mathematic reader, whose I under- 
stand the other transcript to be, with many thanks likewise 
for his pains. And whereas in the marginal notes of your 
manuscript there is one against the vernal observations, which 
either I had not before marked, or else have since forgotten, 
namely, pro prima est secunda vel transposita: I desire him 
to send me word whether that appear to be of the same hand 
and antiquity with the other. Again, whereas in his tran- 
script against those words, et post annum, transcribed in the 
text, but afterward blotted out again, there is moreover ad- 
joined this marginal note, ef post annum deleantur, whether 
that be the ancient censure of either of All Souls’ copies, the 
manuscript or the printed, or his own censure: because all 
those three words are quite left out of them both without any 
marginal note or censure at all. In a word, because the un- 
certainty which of the three copies he took for the ground of 
his transcript breeds some confusion to mine understanding 
of his diverse readings in the margin: I request him to be at 
so much the more pains as to transcribe all that concerns the 
same one or two vernal observations, being not half a score 
lines, from et post hoc, to fere per 5 horas, word for word, 
distinctly and severally out of all three copies, with such 
marginal notes as each of them have: and thereto to add the 
fourth, which I understand to be in Sir Henry Saville’s Ma- 
thematic Library, and which, I doubt not, he may easily ob- 
tain in regard of his acquaintance with Mr. Briggs. And to 
him I desire you both to have me heartily commended, thank- 
ing him for Vieta his Gregorian Calendar, which I received 
from him a se’nnight since: touching which I purpose, God 
willing (if my building hinder me not over much), to write — 
unto him ere long. Meanwhile it is not the least cause of 
my writing unto you at this time, to signify unto him that I 
have received it, and good content with and by it. 

And thereupon I request you all three, namely Mr. Briggs, 
together with Mr. Miller (for that I have been given to un- — 


LETTERS ON SCIENTIFIC SUBJECTS, 53 


derstand your mathematic lecturer’s name is) and yourself, to 
_ have me commended to Mr. Bainbridge, with whom it seems 

you are familiarly acquainted; and tell him, whereas toward 
the end of his Vespers’ lecture, the last act, wherein he dis- 
coursed of the reformation of the year and calendar, he very 
sharply and bitterly inveighed against certain absurd periods, 
_ whereby some went about to restore the same: I desire to 
__ know (which I would further have asked himself, if I could 
__ have had any more speech with him, or with Mr. Briggs at. 
that time) whether he meant mine or no? And if mine (be- 
_ cause I know none other that hath insisted in the same course), 
_ what it is that mislikes him in them? whether they are not 
_ framed according to the right definition of a Period or Annus 
Magnus? or whether they be not sufficiently demonstrated, 
because without a diagramme, to whit, linear, and properly so 
_ termed? which then it will be his part to overthrow by in- 
_ stance, propounding some other briefer or better, of another 
manner and structure, than of Enneadecaéterides and Hen- 
decaéterides: not Vieta’s (consisting of 3400 Julian years), as 
great a mathematician as he was, and as well skilled in dia- 
gramms: which (if upon such a sudden, amidst the clutter- 
ing noise of my labourers about mine ears pulling down my 
house, and the hammering of my masons to build a new, I 
_ rightly conceive) to make a truly defined period, he must 
correct it by my rules, making it shorter by one whole month 
of 29 days than Vieta himself propounded: and so equalling 
it to eleven halfs of my great period together with my duode- 
'narie period. Or whether he thinks not any period at all 
| profitable or needful for the restoring of the year and calen- 
dar? But, and if my form of calendar displease him; it may 
please him to understand, that the calendar is not of the 
essence, but an accident to the period: as whereunto any 
form of either lunar or solar calendar may be accommodated ; 
even the Julian itself: as I have well-nigh two years since 
declared in the preface of my three Diatribe, as some of my 
learned and worshipful friends can bear me witness: there 
being the same reason of the more ancient solar calendar of 
Dionysius Alexandrinus, and of the Augustan Alexandrinian, 
with twelve tricenary months, and five or six days appendices ; 
more commodiously to be placed immediately before either 
equinox, or the aestine solstice. Hereof I desire an answer 
with as much convenient speed as you can procure it: and so 
I commit you to God’s gracious protection. 

Yours, 
Tuomas Lypyat, 


4 


54 LETTERS ON SCIENTIFIC SUBJECTS. 


THOMAS LYDYAT TO SIR HENRY MARTIN. 


[MS. Bodl. 313.] 


To the right worshipful his ever honoured tutor, Sir Henry 
Martine, Judge of the Court of Admiraliy, &c., im our 
Lord and Saviour Christ, health and prosperity of sou!, body 
and whole estate. 


Sir,—My request unto you is to move Sir John Wolsten- 
ham (and whomsoever else you know likely, after so many 
defeates and discouragements, to give yet another essay to- 
wards the finding of the Northern passage to the west of 
America and the East Indies, so long sought for by dur Eng- 
lish nation,) to give entertainment to a scholar, the son of a 
citizen of London, being sorted with a good and discreet — 
captain or master, a skilful pilot and well experienced in the 
northern icy seas, and some thirty or fourty other, honest, 
sober and industrious men, to give his best advice, and do 
his true and best endeavour, for the discovery of the coasts 
under the North pole, and within ten degrees round about, 
especially beyond it: and from those parts so discovered, 
with the trending of the land, and the channels and currents — 
of the sea diligently observed, and the stopping and clearmg — 
thereof with and from the ice duly noted and marked, to find 
out the passages, and fittest passage to the aforementioned 
places. For which his endeavour and enterprize of discovery — 
of those polar regions undertaken upon hope of good success ~ 
through Almighty God’s gracious guidance, assistance and 
blessing, he demands the loan of thirteen hundred pounds to 
be presently (within this fourtnight) laid down for the pay- 
ment of his debts, upon good security of lands and goods | 
pawned to the value therof, for four years. Within which ~ 
time, if the same Polar regions be discovered, then all those — 
lands and goods to be clearly released and resigned to him 
and his assigns for his recompense, without repay of any — 
money: or in case he die in the voyage, yet if by the occasion — 
and means thereof the aforesaid discovery be made, the same 
recompense to be made in like manner to his lawful heirs ac- _ 
cording to his last will. But, and if it please God of His in- — 
finite mercy, that by the same means the Northern passage _ 
be found out as far as to New Albion discovered from the south — 
by Sir Francis Drake on the west part of America, or Japan — 
on the east of Asia; then, upon the ascertaining of such dis- 
covery, there shall be added to the former sum seven hundred ~ 
pounds more, to be paid to him or his assigns by his will. ~ 


LETTERS ON SCIENTIFIC SUBJECTS, 55 


And in whatsoever plantations or colonies of the British na- 
tion hereafter propagated and established upon occasion of 
this discovery, that is to say, in those places, and by such 
passage ; there shall be duly and truely paid the tenth in 
ind of all manner commodities whatsoever accrueing by sea 
or land, to the maintenance of an able ministry of God’s word, 
and schools of all manner of good learning, in the same. Lastly, 
upon the acceptance of this offer, there shall be given to the 
maker thereof, in way and manner of earns, a pair of the 
argest, newest and best globes, and twenty nobles in money, © 
to the furnishing him with books of like argument, for the 
better performance thereof. 

So desireth (the 17th of October, 1626.) 

Your distressed old pupil, 
Tuomas Lypyart. 


__ Concerning the motion that was made to me the other day 
_ by Sir D. D. about going to Constantinople with the new 
ambassador that is shortly to go thither; I do not desire it 
otherwise, than there to get a pass to travel to some of the 
principal cities in Greece, Natolia and Syria, and to Alex- 
-andria and Cairo: and thence by means of the patriarch of 
_ Alexandria and the Abasen pilgrims, that travel yearly that 
_ way to and from Jerusalem, to go in company with them into 
Ethiopia, unto mount Amara, to know the truth of what hath 
_ been reported touching the library there ; and thereabouts to 
study in divinity, history, and astronomy. If this may be 
effected, I shall think myself much beholden to them, by 
_ whose means it is effected. But in the meantime I want 
 fourty marks to print mine almanacks: and (I should have 
' _ first) to buy me a suit of apparel to defend me from the 


rl 


7 November 30th, 1626. 
it Tuomas LypyaAt. 


HENRY BRIGGS TO JOHN PELL. 


[MS. Birch. 4395, Orig.] 


56 LETTERS ON SCIENTIFIC SUBJECTS. 


who brought your letter or by whom to returne my answere,. 
were the occasions, as I now remember, that you have beene 
put to this second trouble. Now I shall indevoure to give 
you suche satisfaction as I can, and seinge I do not know 
who brought this letter, or by whom more conveniently to 
sende, I purpose to sende mine answere to London, from 
thence to be brought to Trinity College where I hope it will 
finde you. 

1. For your first demande (seinge Ido not know whose 


lines you use, my answer wil be somewhat more uncertaine, ~ 
and it may be the author whom you followe would satisfie — 


you more fully,) ’tis well if I can satisfie for mine owne de- 
fectes. These artificiall numbers (injuriously named sines) 
are not made for degrees, minutes, &c., but for the true sinus 


dati cujuscunque gradus et minuti: therefore if you first finde 


the true sine of any arke, the Nothi may best be found by the — 
generall rule set downe in 14 cap. of my booke, Dato cwilibet — 
numero absoluto, Logarithmum congruum invenire et contra. — 
But if this seeme too tedious, you may use the parte pro- © 


portionall. If 60 minutes or secondes rather (for the minutes 
are expressed in the printed tables) give the whole ditference 
inter duos proximos; what shal be the difference to be added 
or subtracted for 27" or any other number; but in the parte 
proportionall we muste not expect suche exact precisenes as 


in the former, especially if there be any notable inequalitie in — 
the differences next adjoyninge: where we may not safely © 
trust proportion, as namely in the artificiall sines of the be- — 
ginninge and ende of the quadrant. But if you be willinge © 
to inlarge some parte of your table to secondes, I have ex- i 
pressed the maner in my booke cap. 12, and more easily | 


cap. 13, where first you may inlarge them to fiftes of minutes 


or to 12"; and if you be at leisure afterwards to 24" or to | 


the 25 parte of a minute; then (the differences beinge brought 
more nere to equalitie) you may somewhat more safely trust 
the parte proportionall. 

2. Concerninge the logar. of all fractions proper or impro- 
per, see my 10 cap. and for a generall rule take this, Diffe- 
rentia logarithmorum numeratoris et denominatoris est loga- 
rithmus datarum partium. As of § 017609125905568 of 2 
—017609 ete. of 12° 034678748622466 of +45, —034678 ete. 
And contra, to finde the absolute number of any logarithme, 
seeke the logarithme in the tables, and if it be there you shall 
have the absolute number in the margent; if it be not there, 


then by the parte proportionall you may come nere it, so that 
if neede be, you change the characteristica as is prescribed in | 


the 11 cap. de qua in 4 cap., for so there wil be lesse defect in 


a - -) > -—o 
SCF Te ae ae UE ETL REST NC MED ee MU TW Ie 


ee — 
SE ON EYEE A Ee A PUR TES TO 


om 


| a, 


LETTERS ON SCIENTIFIC SUBJECTS. 57 


the parte proportionall, when the tabular differences are nerer 
_ to equalitie, by whiche meanes you shall come to the nume- 
_rator of your fraction whose denominator is alwaies 1000 ete. 
For example, the log. of 10 is 1.0000 etc. ; therefore the log. of 
the of 10 must be 050000 (for we must very warily regard 
the characteristica, otherwise the answer wil be false), alter 
the characteristic and it may be +50000 and in 32 chiliads 
_ you shall finde the absolute number next under that whiche 
_ you seeke is 31622; this must be augmented by the part pro- 
portionall, whiche is 7763, so that the number is 316227763 ; 
now seinge the characteristic is 0, till I did augment it, it is 
apparant that the roote of 10 is 346227755. or rather 
3,16227763 as I usually write it. But this aggreethe not withe 
_ the roote sett downe in the 10th page of my booke. I must 
_ confesse it. The parte proportionall is alwaies in these cases 
somewhat defective: see my 16. cap. 

3. Concerninge Mr. Wingate’s booke I hope well that all 
_ he saithe are true; but I have not so advisedly looked on it, 
that I may justly ether except or approve all; but if you 
please to mention in your next any particular, I shall tell you 
mine opinion. 

4. My desire was to have those chiliades which are want- 
inge betwixt 20 and 90 calculated and printed, and I had 
done them all almost by myselfe and by some frendes whom 
my rules had sufficiently informed, and by agreement the 
busines was conveniently parted amongst us: but I am 
eased of that charge and care by one Adrian Vlacque an Hol- 
lander, who hathe done all the whole 100 chiliades, and 
printed them in Latin, Dutche and Frenche, 1000 bookes in 
these three languages, and hathe sould them almost all; but 
he hathe cutt of four of my figures throughout, and hathe left 
out my dedication, and to the reader, and two chapters the 
12 and 13, in the rest he hathe not varied from me at all. 

And thus I have desired to make an amendes for my an- 
sweringe no sooner. If yet there remaine any scruple, if you 
please to write the thirde time I shall be desirous to give you 
further satisfaction. And so commendinge you and your 
studies to the gratious blessinge of the Almightie, I take my 
leave, ever restinge, 

Your very lovinge frende, 


HenRIE BriGGs. 


58 LETTERS ON SCIENTIFIC SUBJECTS. 


THOMAS LYDYAT TO HENRY BRIGGS. 


[MS. Bodl. 313.] 
Bocardo, October 31st, 1628. 


Mr. Briggs,—After a full year gone and past, from the 
time I delivered you the two little notes in August (was 
twelve months) which you say you lost: I did, though with 
much adoe, enforce myself to make them again. The cause 
of my then committing them unto you, had I not told you, 
you must easily conceive, was to have your judgment of them, 
to the end that afterwards I might shew them unto others of 
my worshipful friends to be motives to stir them to do some- 
what for me, either to the helping me out of prison, that was. 
and is my most desire and main suit: where, through the ex- 
ceeding care that I had the last year to discharge my debts 
as fast as I could, and indeed faster than I well could; I 
thank God for all! I was as near starving for hunger, about 
the time you were last with me, in February, as I think ever 
poor prisoner was that scaped it. I had sent you this copy 
as soon as I had new made it, but that I understood you were 
from home. In the meantime I sent it to New College, to 
Mr. Stringer, by him to be delivered to Mr. Warden: who, I 
thank him, the other day brought it to me again himself. 
As I wrote to Mr. Stringer, I dare not say it is to shew the 
probability of so great a refraction, for fear lest all the astro- 
nomers on this side the hither tropic have me by the ears for 
it: but only the possibility: leaving the full determining of 
the business, till I come either under the North pole, accord- 
ing to the letter I sent you. this time twelvemonths, or over 
the Cape of Good Hope; whither I say, to the one place or 
to the other, even to the world’s end, I pray God send me 
safe, so out of prison. I shewed it not long since to Mr. 
Pesor, at his kind visiting me, which, I thank him, he hath 
often done; at what time he told me, to my comfort, he was of 
my mind, that astronomy would never be perfited until there 
were some astronomical observations made under the zqui- 
noctial, and beyond the farther tropic, to be compared with. 
ours. Now I send you the same again, to the same ends 
that I committed them to you at the first. Good Mr. Briggs, 
do not lose these too: but unperfite as they be, let me have 
your judgment of them, within this sennenet or thereafter, as 
your leisure will permit. So with mine hearty commenda- 
tions, and thanks for all your kindnesses, I bid you farewell. 

Your’s, 
Tuomas Lypyart. 


LETTERS ON SCIENTIFIC SUBJECTS, 59 


A PAPER ON THE WEIGHT OF WATER, BY THE 
DUKE OF NORTHUMBERLAND. 


De pondere aque, quo premuntur ¥., quibus altius incumbit. 
Questio ab illustrissimo domino Henrico Comite Northum- 
brie proposita, et ventilata. 
[From Addit. MS. 6789.] 

Quam sit illud verum quod vulgi sermone tritum novimus ; 
errorem quantumvis exiguum in principio, mobilitate vigere, 
_ sed ad finem in immensum excrescere, et quotidiana experien- 
tia probat, et queestione hac proposita dilucide constat. Nam- 


que cum initio libri, de iis, quae vehuntur in aqua, Archimedes 


posuisset instar principii Postulatum quoddam, de motrice na- 
_tura Aque, et partes ejus minus presse cedant loco magis 
_pressis: ab hoc Axiomate vel non claré ab eodem enunciato, 
vel perperam ab aliis intellecto, quantum in errorem pre ce- 
_ teris prolapsus est Simon Stevinus, qui labi cum eo una no- 
_ lunt, mecum jam convenit, ut animadvertant. Itaque tria erunt 


nobis seorsim, et breviter tractanda. 


_ Primo statuendum est, quis sit genuinus sensus ejusdem 

- Postulati Archimedei. 

Secundo manifestandus est error Stevini. 

Tertio asserendus est consensus Phenomenon, experimen- 
torumque ipsa cum veritate juxta intentionem ejus postulati 
_ idque maximé ad preesentis quzestionis solutionem. 

; De Primo. 

Proponit Archimedes Postulatum illud suum hujusmodi. 
Ponatur humidi naturam talem esse, ut partibus ejus ex aquo 
positis, et continuis, minus pressa a magis pressa extendatur. 
Omnis vero pars humidi urgetur ab humido existenti supra 


_ illud in perpendiculo, si humidum ipsum sit descendens ali- 


~ quo, aut ab aliquo pressum. 


i CHRISTOPHER POTTER TO WILLIAM BOSWELL. 


[MS. Bodl. 313.] 
March 28th, 1632. 
Sir,—I shall be most willing to help forward your cha- 


_ ritable intention towards Mr. Lydyat (a man of great merit, 


_ and who might be useful to the public if he were freed from 


__ this miserable condition) and to serve you on this or any other 


60 LETTERS ON SCIENTIFIC SUBJECTS. 


occasion with my uttermost forces. I have effectually treated _ 
with Mrs. Hare, and desired a worthy friend of mine, Dr. Pink — 
ot New College, and Dr. Iles of Hart Hall, who hath much 
power with her, to assist me in this treaty. The gentlewoman ~ 
much complains of the injustice of him and his brother, and — 
of their dealing with her, and says in effect that the sum now 
due to her is 200/.: that they are able enough but not willing 
to satisfy her, that they have received not long since 500/. for 
land sold, that they have defeated many other poor men in 
this kind, that Mr. Thomas Lydyat’s personal debt to her is 
50/., that he threatened to feed his brother in prison with her 
money, that being here in Bocardo he was wont to flout and 
jeer her as she passed the streets, and to say he would make 
her jet it in one silk gown the less, that he is now building a 
new house upon his benefice and therefore is not so poor as 
he pretends, &c. All this and more she avows with great 
confidence, and seems more sensible of their scoffs than of 
any other injuries. Yet to gratify so many worthy friends as 
have moved her in this business, she is content to remit 120/., 
and to take for all 80/., as 50/. in land, and any honest man’s 
band (but she clearly refused to deal with either of them) for 
the 30/. in some reasonable time, two or three years. Here 
is the utmost point to which for aught I can guess, she will 
be drawn. She says, further, that she is aged, and a woman 
not able any way to improve her small store upon which she 
lives: that she maintains a great number of her necessitous kin- 
dred, and is forced with her great expence by law to right 
their injuries: that she is charitable, but doth not believe 
Mr. Lydyat’s fit objects of charity: that she yields all this to 
his friends and hers, nothing to him. 

For my part I cannot believe that Mr. Lydyat, a wise man 
and a scholar, would forget himself so far as to taunt and 
flout her. Both he and she sure have been abused by some 
talebearer. Yet methinks it would not be amiss if Mr. Ly- 
dyat did clear himself to her for that contempt, which most 
deeply she apprehends, and by his letter give her fair satisfaction. 
Some soft words to that purpose may yet a little more mollify 
her. And for the main matter, you being so worthily pleased to 
help him so liberally, what if he laid on his benefice a pen- 
sion of 10/. for three years to pay her, or procure his brother 
to pay it, as in reason and conscience (if he have any; she 
thinks it very small) he ought. But she will have nothing to 
do with them. Here’s the best account I can give you of this 
negociation. 

When you go into the Low Countries ; and when you are 
there, I shall ever attend you with mine hearty prayers that 


LETTERS ON SCIENTIFIC SUBJECTS, 61 


you may do God and his church, and this whole state such 

good service as all that know you do assuredly expect. 

I shall be ever, Sir, 

Your most affectionate friend to honour and serve you, 
CuHar.es Porter. 


THOMAS LYDYAT TO WILLIAM BOSWELL. 


[MS. Bodl. 313.] 


| Mr. Boswell,—Although the course that you have taken in 
my business, to treat with Mrs. Hare for some remission, be 
diverse from the intent of my petition, (the preferment where- 
of to his Majesty and procuring a gracious answer, was my 
whole suit unto you,) yet have I that opinion both of your 
true well-meaning toward me, and of your wisdom, that you 
_ did it in sincere good-will unto me, and for the best. For by 
_ this means, to move the more commiseration of my case, is 
_ the extremity of mine adversary’s hard dealing with me, not 
_ only manifested and confirmed, but also aggravated, yea 
— doubled. It is manifested and confirmed, in that she hath 
_ partly concealed and smothered, and partly altered and falsi- 
fied, the true state of our controversy, and manner of my debt 
_ unto her; as you may perceive by my petition, whereunto, to 
_ avoid needless repetitions, I refer you: wherein that I have 
_ truly stated and declared the one and the other, both my bro- 
_ thers and nephews grants under their hands and seals, that I 
have to shew, will evict, and our whole country both can and 
' will testify on my behalf. And this main wrong of her con- 
_ cealing and shifting and falsifying the state of the contro- 
_-versy, is aggravated, yea, at least doubled, by her heaping 
thereupon a sort of slanderous reports to my defamation, a 
_ greater wrong than my five years’ imprisonment, (yet I ac- 
count that so great, that although she were worth a brace of 
| thousand pounds more than she is worth, she could not make 
_ me amends for it,) whereby she would make the world believe 
_ she hath cause to deal so uncharitably and unconscionably 
_ with me, which otherwise she would not choose but be 
_ ashamed of. The unlikelyhood of my threatening to feed my 
__ brother in prison with her money (whereof I never received 
nor was surety for ——-——) you may easily conceive by my 
' complaining in my petition of , wilfully defeating me of 
_ their grant made unto me, after I had so far engaged myself 
_ in their debts. Touching my being wont in Bocardo to flout 


62 LETTERS ON SCIENTIFIC SUBJECTS. 


and jeer her as she passed the streets: in the whole time (a — 
year and three quarters) of my being there, I was never aware 
of her passing by, but only once, that she was shewed me, at 
which time the party I was then walking and talking with will 
testify I used no surly unseemly speeches or behaviour toward _ 
her. And as for her objecting in special, that 1 was wont tosay 
I would make her jet it in one silk gown the less; she therein 
bewrayed herself to be a weak woman, of less wisdom than she 
would be taken to be. I was never thrice in her company, 
nor did I ever to my remembrance take so much notice of 
her, as that she went in a silk gown. Alas! silly woman, as 
if I had nothing else to busy my wits about, but to mark 
what gowns she and her like went in. But indeed the de- 
fenture of a silk gown is a fit object for a haughty-spirited 
woman’s malice to work upon. That I am building a new 
house upon my benefice, and therefore not so poor as I pre- 
tend, is a senseless imputation: mine old house being so 
ruinous as that my predecessor was afraid to lie in it, I began 
to build a new, and raised it out of the ground girdle steed 
high, before my brother bewrayed his estate, or ever I had 
undertaken any part of his debts: at what time there was no 
staying of it, the old being for the most part already fallen or 
pulled down, and my workmen entertained for the building of 
the new; the building whereof nothing sumptuous, but suit- — 
able to the place and living, as every one that sees it acknow- 
ledgeth, cost and impoverished me an hundred pounds, which 
cost should have been at that time spared, and that business 
at leastwise defferred, if I had been acquainted with my bro- 
ther’s estate before I undertook it; and the finishing thereof, 
with the building of the outhouses all likewise ruined, for 
which I have been threatened to be sued for dilapidations, 
will cost me fifty pounds more; which conscience binds me 
to repair rather than pay another man’s debt to Mrs. Hare, un- 
dertaken upon a grant whereof I am defeated. Thus I find it 
a calamity common to me with other of my fellow-prisoners, 
that our adversaries are fain to catch after and blaze abroad 
slanderous reports against us, to blear the eyes of the world, 
that they have reason to deal extremely with us. But I hope, 
Sir, they shall not blear yours, and much less our gracious 
Sovereign’s; unto whose gracious answer to my petition (to 
be presented by your means, upon the preferment thereof to 
his Majesty, being my whole and only suit unto you, for 
which I shall endeavour to shew myself accordingly thankful,) 
I most humbly recommend me ; 

Remaining yours to be commanded in all Christian duties, 


Tuomas Lypyat. 
King’s Bench Prison, April 4, 1632. 


LETTERS ON SCIENTIFIC SUBJECTS. 63 


THOMAS LYDYAT’S PETITION TO CHARLES I. 


[MS. Bodl. 313.] 


To my dread Sovereign Lord, the King’s most excellent Ma- 
jesty, Charles, by the Grace of God, King of Great Britain, 
France, and Ireland ; Defender of the Faith, &c. 


May it please your Majesty,—Mine humble petition to 
your Majesty is, that you would graciously vouchsafe to grant 
your Royal Privilege to me and mine assigns, for our sole 
_ printing of all such books, tables and writings, as 1 have made 
_ or hereafter shall make ready to be set forth and published in 
rint, and of all other such authors, not yet extant in print, or 
imperfectly extant, as wanting a good and proportionable 
part of their whole works, as I shall find and procure to be 
printed; as also of all such translations into Latin, English, 
or other languages, and commentaries and annotations, as I 
shall make thereupon, for their better explanation; with suf- 
ficient penalty upon the offenders within your Majesty’s domi- 
_nions. And moreover that your Majesty would vouchsafe me 
_ your gracious leave and license to travel into foreign parts, 
as I shall find fit opportunity, namely, into Turkey, and 
Ethiopia, or the Abysinian Emperor’s country, to search and 
find copies especially of civil and ecclesiastical histories, to be 
published in print; and whatsoever other copies may tend to 
the propagation and increase of good learning ; 

Also, that your Majesty would graciously be pleased, that 
_ where you have leiger-ambassadors and agents, with your 
_ confederates, emperors, kings and princes of the countries, 
| they may in your Majesty’s name, in the behalf of myself and 
| mine assigns, and at our suites, move their highnesses to 
grant the like privileges as aforesaid to me and mine assigns, 
_ within each of their dominions. So desireth, that the whole 
world may worthily acknowledge your Majesty’s care for the 
advancement of the commonweal of good learning, 

Your Royal Majesty’s loyal subject, 
Humble petitioner and daily oratour, 
Tuomas Lypyat. 


The Books and Tables that I have heretofore set forth in print, 
and now ready to be reprinted. 


Przlectio astronomica. 

Disquisitio physiologica de origine fontium. 

Tractatus de variis annorum formis. 

Defensio de variis annorum formis contra Josephi Sca- 
ligeri obtrectationem. 


64 LETTERS ON SCIENTIFIC SUBJECTS. 


Solis et lune periodus octodesexcentenaria. 

Epistola astronomica. 

Numerus aureus melioribus lapillis insignatus. ii 
‘Dedicated to your Majesty’s — 


Emendatio temporum. dearest brother, the Most No- — 
Recensio argumentorum. | ble Prince Henry of blessed — 
memory. rt 


These that I have now to print, not before published. 
Procemium trium diatribarum astronomicarum. 
Diatriba; et animadversiones astronomice. 

Problema astronomicum. 

Circuli dimensio Lydyatea, Archimedea succenturiata. 

Marmoreum chronicon Arundellianum, cum annota- 
tionibus. d 

Divina sphera humanorum eventuum.—Observed during 
mine imprisonment, and dedicated to your Majesty. 


THOMAS LYDYAT TO THE ARCHBISHOP OF 
CANTERBURY. 


[MS. Bodl. 662.] 


May it please your Grace,—Being desirous to finish and 
publish, as I hope for the greater good of the church of God 
and of my country, and the commonweal of good learning, 
sundry books and treatises begun by me, partly before and 
partly during the time of my long imprisonment, to the 
finishing whereof I cannot be so convenient!y provided of 
books at my small benefice in the country as in London, Ox- 
ford, and other like places, furnished with libraries and 
shops of books of all sorts; and moreover whereas the pub- 
lishing of them will require my personal attendance for the 
correcting of the printer’s press; mine humble petition to 
your Grace is, to grant me to that end and purpose, a dispen- 
sation for absence from my small parsonage and rectory of the 
parish church of Alkerton in the county and diocese of Ox- 
ford, for three years; and for the drawing and sealing thereof 
by the master of your Court of Faculties, to subscribe this 
petition with your hand, which your gracious respect I shall 
thankfully acknowledge. 

Your Grace’s humble petitioner, 
Tuomas Lypyat. 


Tendered, July 2nd, 1634, and deferred till Michaelmas following. 


LETTERS ON SCIENTIFIC SUBJECTS, 65 


WALTER WARNER TO ROBERT PAYNE, 


[MS. Birch, Brit. Mus. 4279, fol. 290, Orig.] 
Westminster, October 17th, 1634. 


Good Mr. Payne,—For the problem of refractions, which 
you write of, I pray you by any meanes send it to Mr. Hobbes, 
together with my most harty love and service, or whatsoever 
els you shall receve from me that may be thought worth the 
- communicating, yf it plese you to impart it to him, you shall 
do me a plesure. For | have found him free with me, and I 
will not be reserved with him, yf it plese God I may live to see 
him again. That analogy which you have, though it be 
but a particular passion of the subject it concerns, yet it is 
very conducible to the theory and investigation of the cause 
of refraction, the intention whereof ex principiis opticis is the 
grettest magistery in the optik science, and for the practise 
it is of that consequence, as without it the table of refractions 
for glasse and crystall, which is of grettest vse, can never be 
constructed, without which table the dioptrick part of that doc- 
trine, which begins not by reson of the glasses to be in grettest 
esteem, will still remayne imperfect, at best not in that degree 
of perfection by much, as by the help of a well constituted 
table of the angles of refraction the busines, as I conceve it, 
might be brought to. I would be very glad to see Mons". 
Mydorge’s way; yf he make a secret of it, I doubt not but 
_ Mr. Hobbes will know how to trafik with him. So I rest 
; Your very loving and true friend, 
WavLTeR WARNER. 


ROBERT PAYNE TO WALTER WARNER. 


[MS. Birch, Brit. Mus. 4279, fol. 171, Orig.] 
Welbeck, June 21, 1635. 
Worthy Sir,—I have here returned you back your papers, 
conteining the probleme of the mid-ship-mould. S* Charles 
and myself have perus’d them, but cannot understand more 
of them then is written in Latine; the rest we suppose are 


it notes of remembrance, which serve well for your use, but give 
| us not light sufficient to understand your meaning. Only the 


sixtene cases we apprehend well; but the demonstrations of 


_ them we yet understand not, farther then that in the Latine 


F 


66 LETTERS ON SCIENTIFIC SUBJECTS. 


holds. We desire, therefore, you would at your leysure in- | 
struct us farther in the demonstrations of all the cases re- 
mayning, which I suppose you can easily and soone doe out 
of the severall figures in the English paper. We long to 


heare fro you and to receive those things you promis’d. My — 


Lord would gladly be a partaker of, and a student in your ‘ 


philosophicall discourses, if you would impart them to him. 


He is much taken with the device of your perspective glasse — 
and desires you would calculate a line for it, at a good propor- 
tion, as 40 to one, that we might see whether it would hold ~ 
good in practise as well as it seems in speculation; and if it © 
doe, he will be ready to further you in any way you shall © 
desire. Both his Lordship and Sir Charles recommend their 
love to you and soe does : 
Your friend to serve you, 
RoBeRT PAYNE. 


SIR CHARLES CAVENDISH TO WALTER 
WARNER. 


[MS. Birch, Brit. Mus. 4405, fol. 161, Orig.] 
Welbeck, May 2nd, 1636. 


Worthie Sir,—Though I have had some diversions, yet I aske 
your pardon that I have bin so longe before I returned you 
thankes for the two tracts you were pleased to send me; I 
give you manie thankes for them, and esteem (as they justlie 
deserve) verie greatlie of them. I received latelie a letter 
from Mr. Hobbes, where amongst other things he sent me 
this paper heer inclosed, which is an experiment of the place 
of the image of a thing contrarie to the olde tenet ; a candle 
being put into a glasse of a cylindricall forme, the image hangs 
perpendicularlie over the candle itself, as is expressed in this 
figure, and not at the concourse of the perpendicular from the 
object with the visuall line which in this figure is at the point 
A. Mr. Hobbs conjectures that the approach of the image | 
proceeds from the strength of action from the object, which 
is greater heere than in a plaine, by reason of the concavitie © 
of the cylinder which gathers the beames, and by that meanes 
makes the motion or streame of the reflected beames stronger. 
I desire at your convenient leasure to have your opinion of it, — 
as also of this place of the image in convex glasses. I have 


LETTERS ON SCIENTIFIC SUBJECTS, 67 


sent you by this bearer, Mr. Butler, twentie pounds as our 
ack suing ous of your fayoure. And so wishing you all 
hapiness, I remaine 
Your assured freind, 

CHARLES CAVENDYSSHE. 


SIR CHARLES CAVENDISH TO WALTER 
WARNER. 


[MS. Birch, Brit. Mus. 4444, fol. 91. Orig.] 
Wellbeck, September 2nd, 1636. 


_ Worthie Sir,—I give you many thankes for the two tracts 
you sent me, one of the place of the image in concave and 
convex glasses, and the other of the making of prospective 
glasses. I will not trouble you with a repetition of some 
doutes which Mr. Payen and I have of some things in these 
tracts, but refer you to his letter, for he hath promised me to 
write to you of them. The greatest doute that I have in your 
tract of the place of the image is howe the eye can take notice 
of the laterall beames which are without the eye, for sight 
being made, as you write, upon the retiform tunicle, I con- 
ceive not howe we can take notice of the laterall beams which 
are refracted before they come thither, or, as I conceive, we 
take no notice of that refraction. Sir, you see the boldness 
‘I take to trouble you, which your former favours have en- 
couraged me to doe. And so wisshing you all hapiness, I 
rest, 


v 
‘ 


Your assured freind, 
CuaARLES CAVENDYSSHE. 


ROBERT PAYNE TO WALTER WARNER. 


[MS. Birch, Brit. Mus. 4458, fol. 26. Orig.) 
Welbeck, October 3rd, 1636. 


' Good Mr. Warner,—Though the plague (thanks be to God) 
| hath not yet come nere us, yett we feele the ill effects of it. 
_ One whereof is, the interruption of intercourse of letters fro’ 
' us to you, and you to us. 

_ I had some time since written to you concerning the two 
tracts you sent last to Sir Charles Cavendysshe, but I was 
not certaine where you were, or how my letter should come 
at you. Now having notice of your continuance at Cran- 
F 2 


68 LETTERS ON SCIENTIFIC SUBJECTS. 


borne lodge, and the conveniency of a passenger that way, F 
have advertised these lines to you, desiring to heare from you — 
agayne by the next opportunity you can finde. . 
In your tract De Loco Imaginis, &c.,the theoremes you take 
for principles, undemonstrated, require demonstration, as 
much as the conclusion you would proove by them, which ~ 
yourself having first given notice of, | suppose it worth your | 
paines to send their demonstrations: and so to cleere the — 
manner of vision, how it is made, demonstratively ; for as ye 
we take all upon probability. _@ 
But suppose these theoremes were demonstrated, there © 
is yet one maine doubt remaining ; and that is, how the sense ~ 
should take notice of the laterall beames, which only touch ~ 
on the superficies of the eye, and enter not into it directly, — 
but refracted. And if the sense follow the direction of the | 
refracted beame, that leads it not to the 
object. As suppose the lateral beame be * ~ 
B QO; the refracted beame in the eye OA; : 
the doubt is, how the sense can take no- 
tice of B O without the eye, soe as by that 
to be descried in the place of the image. Seo Tey Soe 
Whereas it seemes more probable the eye 
should be sensible only of the beame O A, 
which is within it; but then if it follow 
the direction of this beame AO, it will 
lead it to P, against all experience. But it may be, the 
cleare expression and good proofe of the manner how vision 
is made, will satisfye this inquisition and cleare the doubt ; 
I meane the manner how simple vision is made, and how in 
that the sense judges the object without it to be in such a © 
place, and not short or further on; for though this forme is a 
thing evident of itself, yet when I consider it more seriously, © 
I finde it not sufficiently demonstrated by any I have yett | 
read, 
Agayne, supposing the sight to be discovered on the lateral — 
beames, yet it is not thoroughly apparent why it should | 
judge the place of the object to be in the concurse of these — 
beames. You will say perhaps, else it would judge the ob- 
ject to be in two places. This I well conceive as an absurdity 
crossing under experience ; but the cause a priori is the thing 
I looke for and would have, if it may be had. And indeed — 
this lawe well cleered would necessaryly conclude the former, 
except single vision may be made on one line, and then the 
former doubt must be cleered by itself. 
Concerning your other tract of the Prospective. The short 
time I stayd with you permitted me not to take sufficient in- 


LETTERS ON SCIENTIFIC SUBJECTS. 69 


‘structions from you to satisfye Sir Charles in the matter of 
that calculation ; nor the effects of the glass focus according 
to the measures of it. The doubts we conceive of its effects, 
supposing the calculations right, are these. 

_ 1. How clere vision can be made, by beames tending to an 
angle in the eye: for this seemes contrary to one of the theo- 
yemes undemonstrated in your other tract: but your glass 
drawes the beames to an angle on the eye. 

2. How one beame can be sufficient to cause cleare vision 

of the point whence it comes; for soe your glass seemes to. 
be calculated, to refract ordinately but one beame from one 
point of the object. 
3. But if you say the glass so form’d will convey all the 
beames falling on it from one poynt ordinately to the eye, 
this would be well demonstrated ; for else it would cause con- 
fusion, and so destroy, if not all, at least clere and distinct 
vision. 

4. Lastly, supposing all before were made good; the ques- 
tion is whether the hand or toole of any artificer be able to 
worke the formes or moulds, and consequently the superficies 
of the glass soe true, as that to nature they shall be distin- 
_ guished from other convexe superficies, as the spheriques, 
coniques, &c. 

— Sir, I know it is a difficult taske for you to treat by letters, 
but since we have yet no other way, and that the infectious 
ayre hinders both yours and my gooing to London, where we 
might meet to consider how to bring this to some good pass, 
I desire you to doe us the favour, in the meane while, to write 
to us as oft as you can. 
_ I heare Mr. Hobbes is expected, with his charge, very 
shortly. I doubt not but he will finde you out; and by him 
| you may send your letters to us, if you can finde no other, 
_ Or if you send your packett to one Mr. Boothe, steward to 
| the Countess of Devonshyre, at Byflett, nere Oatlands, to be 
| sent by him to me at Welbeck; in regard of messengers that 
| pass between them and us, your letters will come to us that 
lf way. 

_ Sir, I beseech you present my humble service to the noble 
knight and lady, where you are, as also to Mr. Aylsbury and 
_ Mr. Hyde, with my hearty thanks to them for their favours. 
| Soe God keepe you and 
ba Your faythfull friend and servant, 

RoBert Payne. 


70. LETTERS ON SCIENTIFIC SUBJECTS. 


THOMAS LYDYAT TO MR. ROUSE. 


[MS. Bodl. 313.] 


To his friend, Mr. Rouse, Fellow of Oriel College, and Keeper 
of the public Library in Oaford. i 

Mr. Rouse,— Having occasion to send to Oxford, Ihave sent 
you a copy of my period for Dr. Morrison, not so fair a one 
as I would, (during mine imprisonment my papers of some — 
were many of them stained, and some quite marred with wet;) 
but indeed all that I have left, except only that with Dr. Bain- — 
bridge his censure, and mine answer to it; a transcript whereof, 
and of my postcript in the bottom of my table hung in the — 
library, being some part of it worn away, I have sent withal: | 
that you might the better understand what I said to you, of — 
hanging up a better in its place. I pray you remember my — 
service to Dr. Morrison: I would I were able to gratify him ~ 
or any of you all in a better matter. I pray you also, as you ~ 
have fit opportunity, remember me to Dr. Turner; I was in- — 
deed very desirous to have spoken with him, and tarried all | 
that afternoon, the night following, and the next day, till past 
nine oclock in Oxford, only for that cause: and when he sent — 
me word by his man, that [ could not speak with him till two — 
oclock .in the afternoon, the excuse that I made was true, that 
my horse was weak, and borrowed but for a day: whereunto ~ 
I might have added, that the poor man of whom I borrowed | 
him (my nephew, the bearer hereof, lately one of your college — 
tenant’s tenant in Kenington, whose errand to Oxford at this | 
time is to bring a child of his, one of my grand nephews, to ~ 
be a chorister in New College,) hath none other means to get | 
his living but by his teem, whereof that was one, and the ~ 
principal his fhiller: as all your college tenants and the whole | 
town of Kenington can witness: and therefore I was loth to — 
adventure the wronging of him in that kind; especially this 
busy time of harvest, and opportunest time of the year to cart — 
any whither. Otherwise I could have been content to have — 
further attended Dr. Turner’s leisure. So with remembrance | 
of my duty to my betters, and with my duty and my best — 
service to my good nurse the University of Oxford, I remain | 
Yours to be commanded in what I may, : 

Tuomas Lypyat. 


Allerton, Aug. 2, 1638. 


LETTERS ON SCIENTIFIC SUBJECTS. 71 


NATHANIEL TORPORLEY TO THE DUKE OF 
NORTHUMBERLAND. 
(MS. Birch, Brit. Mus. 4409, fol. 87. Orig.] 
July 5th, 1632. 
May it please your Lordship,—I presumed heretofore to 

move your Lordship on the behalf of Mr. W. for some con- 
sideration to be had of his extraordinary expense in attending 
_ the publication of Mr. H.’s book, after the copy was finished. 
The same humble request I am induced to renew by reson of 
his present wants, occasioned by that attendance. | 

For his literary labour and paines taken in forming the 
_ work and fitting it for the publick view, he looks for no other 
_ reward then your Lordship’s acceptance thereof as an honest 
discharge of his duty. But his long attendance through un- 
_ expected difficulties in seeking to get the book freely printed; 

_and after that was undertaken, the frivolous delaies of the 
_ printers and slow proceding of the presse, which no intreties 
of his or mine could remedy, drew him to a gretter expence 
_ then his meanes would bere, including both your Lordship’s 
pencion and the arbitrary help of his frends. It is this ex- 
traordinary expense, which he cannot recover, which makes 
both him and me for him appele to your Lordship’s goodness 
_ and bounty for some tollerable mitigation therof. 
I purpose, God willing, to set forth other peeces of Mr. H., 
wherein, by reson of my owne incumbrances, I must of ne- 
_ cessity desire the help of Mr. W., rather then of any other ; 
-whereunto I find him redy enough, because it tends to your 
_ Lordship’s service, and may the more freely trouble him, yf 
| he receive some little encouragement from your Lordship to- 
wards the repairing of the detriment that lies still upon him 
by his last imploiment. But for the future my intention is 
to have the impression at my own charge, and not depend on 
the curtesy of those mechaniks, making...... that which 
may seeme to be saved by the other way, will not counter- 
vaile the trouble and tedious prolongation of the busines. 
But the copies being made perfect and faire written for the 
presse, they shall be sufficiently bound to deliver the books 
| perfectly clen out of theire hands, and by this meanes the 
_ trouble and charge of attending the presse will be saved. 
_ Therefore, my Lord, what you do now will be but for this 
_ once; and in such proportion as shall best like you to favour 
_ the humble motion of him who is 


Allway most redy at your Lordship’s commaund, 
T..Aat® 


_ _ * This letter, although signed by the initials T. A., is in the handwriting of 
¥ _ Torporley, and from that circumstance and the subject matter of the letter, there 


72 LETTERS ON SCIENTIFIC SUBJECTS. 


SIR CHARLES CAVENDISH TO JOHN PELL. 


[MS. Birch, Brit. Mus. 4278, fol. 143. Orig.] 
Wellingor, January 8th, 1641. 


Worthie Sir,—I have not much to write to you of, onelie 
I have heard nothing of those bookes you writ to me of. I 
have sent you hereinclosed what Mersennus latelie sent me. 
I desire you will doe me the favoure to write it oute and send 
it me, for I confess his hande is an Arabicke character to me ; 
I praye you keepe his paper till it please God wee meete. I 
doute heer hath bin ill weather for Mr. Reeves to worcke in. 
And so wisshing you all hapiness, I rest 

Your assured freind to serve you, 
CHARLES CAVENDYSSHE. 


SIR CHARLES CAVENDISH TO JOHN PELL. 


[MS. Birch, Brit. Mus. 4278, fol. 146. Orig. ] 
Wellingor, Feb. 5, 1641. 


Worthie Sir,—I thanke you for your letter and the tran- 
script of Mersennus problem ; if he hath read Mr. Brigs or 
Mr. Oughtred I wonder he would send it, but it maye be he 
hath found it the analyticall waye himself. I am glad Mr. 
Reaves was in such forwardness when you writ; but I doute— 
the glass (which I hope is nowe finished) is not of the same 
which you tried your refraction in, because Mr. Reaves hath 
broken in his triall so much glass, that I doute there is none 
left of that which you tried your refraction in; but I hope 
fine glass differs so little in refraction that it will not doe us 
much harme. I hope you goe on with your owne analytical 
worcke as your occasions will permit you. I have no more 
at this time to trouble you with, but remaine 

Your assured freind to serve you, 
Cuar_Les CAVENDYSSHE. 


can be little doubt but that it was written and composed by him. There is no 
direction to this letter, but the allusion to Warner’s pension shows to whom it 
was addressed. It is scarcely necessary to observe that the initials W. and H. are 
intended for Warner and Harriot. This letter will serve to show the reason why 
Torporley afterwards attacked the work of Harriot: he doubtless failed in some 
application to the Duke of Northumberland, and his well-known irascible temper 
converted his previous respect for Harriot’s memory into hatred. See my Life of 
Sir Samuel Morland, p. 28. 


LETTERS ON SCIENTIFIC SUBJECTS. 73 


SIR CHARLES CAVENDISH TO JOHN PELL. 


[MS. Birch, Brit. Mus. 4278, fol. 134.] 
Wellingor, June 26, 1641. 
Sir,—I perceive oure business of making the perspective 
glass proceeds not, and I knowe not well howe to help it, 
unless there be some as good matter to make glass in some 
other place to be bought, for it seemes that at Broadstreet 
will not be had; I am not willing to trouble Sir Robert 
-Mansfeild about it, though I thinke he would not denie me. 
Therefore, if you or Mr. Reaves can finde fitting matter for 
us somewhere els, ye should doe me a greate favoure ; Broad- 
street I suppose will be the best place to make the glass, when 
_ye have bought the stuff to make it of. I shall write to Mr. 
Reyes to give us his help herein. I must againe thanke you 
_ for your waie of ordering equations, and doe desire that you 
will proceed in your intended analyticall worcke, as your oc- 
casions will give you leave. I desire to knowe if Mr. War- 
ners analogicall worck goe on or not. And so wisshing you 
all hapiness I remaine 
Your assured freind to serve you, 
CuarRuEes CAVENDYSSHE, 


If you knowe an easie and readie waie to measure the re- 
_ fraction in water, you should doe me a favoure to let me knowe 
it; for I confess I knowe none. 


SIR CHARLES CAVENDISH TO JOHN PELL. 


[MS. Birch, Brit. Mus. 4278, fol. 136. Orig.] 
Wellingor, Julie 24, 1641. 


Worthie Sir,—I am glad to heare you have got some glass ; 


ie I hope it is good and fit for oure purpose, for I should be 
_ unwilling that you and Mr. Reaves should bestowe your 
| paines upon course glass. When you have tried what the 
refraction is in that glass I desire to knowe it, and allso howe 
. you like the glass. I have latelie received some propositions 


out of France, some demonstrated and some not, but I will 
not divert you from the business you have in hand. I am 
glad you have begun the analogiques, and hope allso that you 


_ proceed in your owne analiticall worcke. And so wisshing 
' you all hapiness, I remaine 


Your assured freind to serve you, 
CHARLES CAVENDYSSHE. 


74 LETTERS ON SCIENTIFIC SUBJECTS. 


SIR CHARLES CAVENDISH TO JOHN PELL. 


[MS. Birch, Brit. Mus. 4278, fol. 139. Orig. ] 
Wellingor, November 20th, 1641. 


Worthie Sir,—I hope Mr. Reaves is in a good forwardness _ 
with the convex glass; I dout not but you will trie all con- 
clusions with it, which may conduce to informe you whether 
it be an hyperbole or no; as allso what proportion the dia- — 
meter of the glass hath to the line of the contracted beames — 
of the sun at the pointes of concourse; as allso to observe 
what aparances are made, the eye being placed in, before, or — 
behinde, the pointe of concourse; and in the mean time, be- — 
fore the concave glass be made, to trie whether my concave ~ 
glass which you have, will in anie sort fit it. Sir, 1] leavethe — 
further scrutinie of this to your better consideration, and ~ 
wisshing you all hapiness, remaine | 

Your assured freind to serve you, 
CHARLES CAVENDYSSHE. 


I praye you comend me to Mr. Reaves when you see him. 


SIR CHARLES CAVENDISH TO JOHN PELL. 


[MS. Birch, Brit. Mus. 4278, fol. 141. Orig.] 
Wellingor, December 18, 1641. 

Worthie Sir,—I thanke you for your letter of December 13. 
I am glad Mr. Reeves is so well fitted for oure worcke ; when 
he hath done it, I dout not but you will make all such trialls 
as maye give you satisfaction whether it be a true hyperbole 
or not, and then proceed to the making of the concave glass ; 
if this fit it not, I shall still be in hope that a concave on both 
sides will. I have not (to my remembrance) seene Henis- — 
chius arithmetick, nor should desire, for his mislike of de- 
monstration by letters ; yet if you thinke there be anie thinge 
in him considerable, which is not in Vieta or de Cartes, I de- 
sire you will send it me, and Mr. Moselei will paye for it, as 
allso for Scheiner’s Ars Nova Delineandi. I confess I expect 
not an exact booke of analiticks till you perfect yours. And 
so wisshing you all hapiness I rest 

Your assured freind to serve you, 
Cuar_Les CAvENDYSSHE. 


LETTERS ON SCIENTIFIC SUBJECTS. 75 


ROBERT PINK TO THOMAS LYDYAT. 


[MS. Bodl. 313.] 


Mr. Lydyat,—I cannot so well give you account of your 
_ tractate which you have sent me, as if you yourself come over 
hither to me. Which that you may do without your charge or 
trouble, I have of purpose sent over this my servant Henry 
_ Davis with a horse for you. He hath friends to visit some 
_ few miles beyond you, which he may do and be back with you 
at Alkerton upon Monday or Tuesday, as you shall appoint, 
_ to attend you hither. A chamber and fire and diet you shall 
_ have with me at New College, and the longer you please to 
_ stay, the better welcome shall you be. Is this all, will you 
say? No! but there is that more in it, which will, I am sure, 
- compell you to come over. And that is a great desire my 
_ Lord Primate of Ireland hath to see you, and to joy your 
company for awhile. I need not tell you, for you know him 
better than I do, that he is a man of that esteem, as no man 
now living, that I can hear of, is, for his exquisite knowledge 
and solid judgment in (almost) all points of learnmg. You 
cannot any way grace yourself more in the eye and opinion 
of the University than to have it known that he loves you and 
approves your learning. I, perceiving his good affection to 
_ you, told him of your “ Apparatus ;” and at his earnest re- 
_ quest, delivered him a good part of it, viz. all from the 88th 
page to the end, to read over: the former part he told me he 
had read over long since; his meaning was, I thought, in 
English. Dr. Bainbridge was then in company with us, and 


: therefore I mentioned your Mesolabe to His Grace, and Dr. 


Bainbridge his non satis Geometrice, telling them both that 
I looked to having defects punctually discovered, and not so 
in the general. And my Lord, if any man will be able to 

ress him to that, and disclose either your mistake, or (which 
i rather believe) his. So not doubting but that you will have 
that respect to His Grace’s loving expressions of the desire 
he hath to see you here, as to come over to him, and make me 
your host while you please, I heartily wish you a speedy and 
safe journey hither, so remaining always 

Your assured loving friend, 
RoBert PINK. 
New College, Oxon. 
November 13th, 1641. 


76 LETTERS ON SCIENTIFIC SUBJECTS. 


SIR CHARLES CAVENDISH TO JOHN PELL. 


[MS. Birch, Brit. Mus. 4278, fol. 168. Orig.] 

Hamburg, January $0) 1644. 
Worthie Sir,—It is so longe since I hearde from you that 
I doute my letters which I last writ to you, came not to your 
handes. I sent you inclosed in one of them the answeare 
which I receaved from Auspurge concerning Reyeta’s glass, 
and allso my desire that you would be pleased to enquire of 
Reyeta, who I heare is at Antwerp, of what conditions one 
of his glasses may be had. I suppose some merchant of your 
acquaintance will doe so much for your sake. I have latelie 
had some discourse with Doctor Jungius and Mr. Tassius ; 
douteless they are both verie learned men. I was at Doctor 
Jungius his house, where he shewed me manie treatises of his 
owne in manuscript, videlicet, De Locis Planis, De Motu Locali, 
staticks, hydrostaticks, and some observations of insects. I 
have as greate an opinion of his abilities as of anie mans. I 
finde he is not yet minded to print anie thinge, but I hope 
hereafter he will, and I despaire not in the meane time but 
he will imparte somewhat to me. I asked Mr. Tassius (as 
you desired me) his opinion of your refutation of the Dane, 
who aproves of it, and that you doe it without helpe of the 
Table of Tangents. I writ im some of my last letters to 
knowe if Cavalieros worckes and Sethus Calvisius of musick 
were to be had. Sir, I have no more at this time, but wissh- 

ing you all happiness remaine 
Your assured friend to serve you, 
CHARLES CAVENDYSSHE. 


SIR CHARLES CAVENDISH TO JOHN PELL. 


[MS. Birch, Brit. Mus. 4278, fol. 175. Orig.] 
Hamburg, January gt, 1644. 


Worthie Sir,—I give you manie thankes for your letter of 
the 39 of this month. Iam glad to heare you meane not to 
trouble your self with Longomon. more than as an appendix 
to some of your intended worckes, which I confess I longe 
much to see, whatsoever it be, especiallie if it be of analytycks. 
I give you also manie thankes for your inquirie of Reieta, and 
hope shortelie to heare from you whether there be anie hopes 
to procure one of his best glasses. Iam glad he will print 


LETTERS ON SCIENTIFIC SUBJECTS. 47 


somewhat howe to make them. Who that is that makes those 
excellent glasses in England, I know not. I should have 
guessed him to have bin Hammilton, who was generall of 
the artillerie to Leslei, but you write him Haman, whom I 
have not heard of, but I hope heereafter wee may procure one 
of them. I am sorie Calvusius cannot be had, I shall not 
yet trouble you for the other, but returne you manie thankes 
for your inquirie of them. I am now growne into some 
aquaintance with Doctor Jungius, who is pleased to visit me 
commonlie twice a weeke, and to imparte to me some of his 
conceptions de motu locali; wee are yet but in the definitions, 
_ which are verie well expressed ; he hath allso imparted to me 
divers theorems on the same subject, but not demonstrated 
them, but I doute not but he can and will, after he hath laied 
foundation enough in definitions and axiomes to builde upon. 
I am sorie | lost so much time before I was aquainted with 
him, but I shall endevoure to redeeme it during my staie 
heere. And so hoping to heare shortelie from you, and wissh- 
ing you all happiness, I rest 
Your assured friend to serve you, 
Cuarues CAVENDYSSHE. 


SIR CHARLES CAVENDISH TO JOHN PELL. 


[MS. Birch, Brit. Mus. 4278, fol. 177, Orig.] 
Antwerp, March 26, olde style. 


Worthie Sir,---Not to trouble you with more particulares 
of oure journei than that at Rotterdam Sir William Boswell 
came to us, whom I found to be that which I supposed him 
formerlie to be, a discreete, civill gentleman. I perceive he 
thinkes Monsieur de Cartes his last booke to be full of fancie, 
though he esteemes much of him. Heere I mett with Sir 
Kenelm Digbie’s booke, but had no time to reade it all; but 
it apeares to me to have some things in it extraordinarie. 
Wee met heere with the famous Cappuchin Rieta, his booke 
is nowe in the press heere allmost finished. Hee solves the 
aparences of the planetes by excentricks, without aquants or 
epicicles, and yet not according to Copernicus system of the 
worlde. He teaches allso in this booke the making of his 
newe tellescope ; his tube for his best glass was spoiled so that 
wee could not see it, but wee sawe another made by his di- 
rections, but had not the oportunitie of looking at a conve- 
nient object far distant, but as I guess it is not better than 


78 LETTERS ON SCIENTIFIC SUBJECTS. 


myne, it represents objects even. I had not discourse enough 
with him alone to aske him manie queres, but douteless he 
is an excellent man and verie courteous, and I found him free 
and open in his discourse to me. He saies he can easilie and 
infalliblie finde the longitude, but he discovers not that in 
this booke. He saies the satellites of Jupiter are little sunns, 
and divers other novelties he hath,observed, manie of which 


he will not discover in this booke. I have no more nowe to — | 
trouble you with, but to desire that you will thinke of pub- — 


lishing some of your rarities, especiallie in the analitickes, 
And so wisshing you all happiness, I remaine 
Your assured friend and servant, 
Cuarues CAVENDYSSHE. 
Wee are nowe going towardes Bruxells. 


SIR CHARLES CAVENDISH TO JOHN PELL. 
[MS. Birch, Brit. Mus. 4278, fol. 149, Orig.] 
Hamburg, Julie 26, 1644. 


Worthie Sir,—I give you manie thankes for your letter, 
which I received yesterdaie, and since things goe not so well 
in England, I am glad you are so well placed for the present, 
for I suppose it a place of good means as well as of honor; 
yet I hope by the grace of God wee shall one daie meet in 
England, and live more happilie there than ever wee did. I 
thinke wee shall remaine a whyle in this towne, and so be 
deprived of the happiness of your conversation but by letter, 
which I desire you will be pleased sometimes to afford me at 
your best leasure. I desire you will doe me the favoure to 
send me one of De Cartes his new bookes, De Principiis Phi- 
losophie, without anie addition of his olde worckes, except he 
hath either added or altered something in the matter; I de- 
sire you will let me knowe the price of it, and howe I maye 
with most convenience returne monie to you, for I am likelie 
to trouble you for more bookes. I praye you let me knowe 
whether Mr. Warner’s Analogicks be printed. I hope you 
proceed in your intended worcke of Analiticks, which if you 
doe not, I beseech you doe, and finish it with all convenient 
speed; for I confess I expect not anie absolute worcke in that 
kinde, but from yourself. I praye let me knowe what new 
inventions are extant in the mathematicks latelie, if anie. 
And so wisshing you all happiness, I rest 

Your assured freind to serve you, 
CHARLES CAVENDYSSHE. 


Rise 


EL IS NT ee ge a ae Re ee iad ee . . r 
y r= SSeS eg Am or Ye c b= ae eS ee ee ee Ey aks eras i 


~ ee 
ee fee 


Wie 


Sts bee 


LETTERS ON SCIENTIFIC SUBJECTS. 79 


SIR CHARLES CAVENDISH TO JOHN PELL. 
[MS. Birch, Brit. Mus. 4278, fol. 151, Orig.] 
Hamburg, Aug +4, 1644. 
Worthie Sir,---Douting that my letter of last week came 


not to your handes, makes me nowe trouble you with this. 
I give you manie thankes for your letter, and am most glad 
that you are well and in so good a condition; I doute not 


but you have hearde the occasion of oure comming over, I. 
take no pleasure to write it, nor I suppose you to reade it; 
Gods will be done, and to that I humblie submit. I desire 


_ you will be pleased to send me De Cartes De Principiis Philo- 


sophie, and none of his olde bookes, except there be some 
addition or alteration. I desire your opinion of the late dis- 


-coverie of newe stars; I see Gassendus doutes of it. I desire | 


to knowe if Mr. Warner’s Analogicks be printed, and if there 


_ be any newe bookes of Analiticks, but I expect no greate 


advancement of Analitickes but by yourself, therefore I be- 


_ seech you proceede in your intended worcke. I am likelie 


sometimes to trouble you for bookes, therefore I desire you 


_ will let me knowe howe I maye returne monie to you. I 


~E 


— oO 


"+ 


6 Se geen ar 


_ longe to see you. In the meantime I hope to converse by let- 


ters. I remaine 
Your assured freind to serve you, 
CHARLES CAVENDYSSHE. 


JOHN PELL TO SIR CHARLES CAVENDISH. 
[MS. Birch, Brit. Mus. 4280, fol. 101.] 


Amsterdam, August 7, 1644. 


Right Honourable,—Nine days agoe was your answere to 
mine left at my lodging by a man that would have nothing 


_ for postage. Had I seene him, perhaps I might have learned 


some conveniency of sending backe to you againe, so that my 

letters might be lesse chargeable than if they come thus single 

to you by the ordinary poste. Mata 
I had sent you Des Cartes his new booke forthwith, if 


_ your letter had given me direction how to convey it to you; 


which, seeing you have not done, I resolve to send it to Ham- 
burg by the next ship, to be left for you either at Berthold 


'Offermans, a booksellers ; or else, at some other friends house 


_ which I shall signify by letter. Though the title-page of the 


80 LETTERS ON SCIENTIFIC SUBJECTS. 


other part tell us that it is ab auctore perlecta variisque in locis | 
emendata, yet I have given orders to leave it out, and to binde 
his Principia Philosophie apart for you; whereby halfe the 
price is abated. I suppose I shall have it to-morrowe, and 
then I shall soone finde some ship to send it by: for such 
opportunittes betweene this towne and Hamburg are very fre- 
uent. 

i Des Cartes himself is gone into France. Monsieur Hardy 
tells us, in a letter lately written, that Des Cartes met him — 
in Paris, and blamed him for offering so much mony to our — 
Arabicke professor at Utrecht, for his Arabicke manuscript 
of Apollonius. Which Mr. Hardy interprets as a signe of envy 
in Des Cartes, as being unwilling that we should esteeme the ~~ 
ancients, or admire any man but himselfe for the doctrine of 
lignes courbes. . 

But I think France alone will afford me argument for a 
large letter, and therefore I leave it till the next time. , | 

Come we therefore to England. And first for Mr. War- — 
ner’s Analogickes, of which you desire to know whether they — 
be printed. You remember that his papers were given to his 
kinsman, a merchant in London, who sent his partner to bury 
the old man: himselfe being hindred by a politicke gout, 
which made him keepe out of their sight that urged him to 
contribute to the parliament’s assistance, from which he was 
exceedingly averse. So he was looked upon as one that ab- 
sented himselfe out of malignancy, and his partner managed 
the whole trade. Since my comming over, the English mer- 
chants heere tell me that both he and his partner are broken, 
and now they both keepe out of sight, not as malignants, but 
as bankrupts. But this you may better inquire among our 
Hamburg merchants. In the meane time I am not a little 
afraid that all Mr. Warner’s papers, and no small share of — 
my labours therein, are seazed upon, and most unmathe- — 
matically divided between the sequestrators and creditors, 
who (being not able to ballance the account where there ap- — 
peare so many numbers, and much troubled at the sight of — 
so many crosses and circles in the superstitious Algebra and 
that blacke art of Geometry) will, no doubt, determine once 
in their lives to become figure-casters, and so vote them all 
to be throwen into the fire, if some good body doe not re- 
prieve them for pye-bottoms, for which purposes you know 
analogicall numbers are incomparably apt, if they be accu- 
rately calculated. 

I cannot tell you much better news of my analyticall spe- 
culations, of the finishing of which you desire to heare. I 
came over hither in December last, not bringing any of my 


LETTERS ON SCIENTIFIC SUBJECTS. 81 


‘bookes or papers with me: nor hardly clothes, for the worst 

Thad seemed good enough to weare o’ shipboard. I then 
thought not to stay heere above a fortnight ; nor did I imagine 
‘that before I gat out of this towne againe, I should be per- 
‘suaded to clime the cathedra, and make inaugurale orations 
and prelusions, and afterward reade publikely 5 dayes in a 
weeke, an houre every day in Latine. Which had I foreseene, 
I thinke that all the bookes and papers that I had, both 
yours and mine, should have come along with me to enable 
me to doe those things the more easily. And yet I have no 
great minde to goe fetch them, nor to send for them; so long 
as they are there unstirred, they seeme to be safe. But the 
disasters of the whole kingdome put me in minde of what 
Melancthon used so often to say, non est tutum quieta movere. 
What may happen to them in the remoovall, by searchers, 
pirats, &c., I am not willing to try. Yet so long as they are 
there we cannot count them out of danger. But should that 
_ befall Mr. Warner’s papers and mine which we feare, it would 
_ put me into an humour quite contrary to that in which I have 
_ hitherto beene. I have thought nothing elaborate enough to 
be printed, till it were so complete that no man could better 
it, and did therefore so long keepe my name out of the presse : 
but now I begin to count nothing safe enough till it be 
_ printed, and therefore I have almost resolved to secure my 
thoughts, not by burying my papers in England, nor by 
_ fetching them hither, but by publishing the same notions 
_heere that I have committed to paper there. 

I had thought heere to have given you account of what I 
have now in hand; but being desirous by this poste to let 
_ you know that your letter came safe to my hands, I am con- 
strained to breake off heere, deferring the rest till my next. 
In the meane time I remaine, Sir, 

Your humble servant, 
Joun PE.u. 


SIR WILLIAM PETTY TO JOHN PELL. 


[MS. Birch, Brit. Mus. 4279, fol. 173, Orig.] 
Leyden, August 14, 1644. 


Sir,—On Sunday noone I received youre lettre of Friday, 
together with nine copies of youre refutation of Longomon- 
| anus, the whiche, according to your desire, I have distributed 
| as followeth, viz: to Golius, who, upon perusall of it, said it 
was a most solid refutation, thanking you very much that you 
G 


82 LETTERS ON SCIENTIFIC SUBJECTS. 


remembred him with a copie, and said withall, that heeathis 
last beeing at Amsterdam much endeavored to have wayted ~ 
on you there. But he told mee that it is well thirty yeares ~ 
since Longomontanus his doctrine first saw light, since which — 

tyme hee hath by many letters beene advertised of his error, 
but being strangely enamoured of his invention, could not bee 
made to retract it; and hee hath growne extreme old in his 
dotage thereon, “ wherefore,” said Golius, “ t?were scarce re- 
ligion to trouble the obstinat old man any more, since other _ 
thoughts would better become his yeares than the mathema- 
ticks.” I then went to Salmatius, professor honorarius, who ~ 
likewise shew’d many tokens of his kind acceptance, and told ~ 
mee (among other discourse, whereof I had much with him) ~ 
that the age of the author of this false opinion would sett an 
authority on it, and therefore it had the more need of refuta- 
tion. Walzus thankes you very much, expressing no faint — 
desires to have the honor (as hee said) of youre acquaintance. ~ 
I have presented one to Mons". de Laet but this morning, for — 
at a many other tymes that I had formerly been to wayte on ~ 
him, I was not so happy as to find him. Van Schooten also ~ 
thanckes you, but hee being very old and indisposed I had | 
not much talke with him as I had with the others. To Dr. © 
Kyper, being a man reasonably vers’d in those studies, and ~ 
not of low esteeme here, I presented one; I have given 2 ~ 
to Toncher Hooghland, a chymist and physician, Des Cartes | 
his most intimate fred and correspondent, who hath pro- ~ 
mised at his next writing to send one to Des Cartes. And ~ 
so, having retayned only one to show my friends up and © 
downe where I goe, I hope they are all disposed of to your © 
mind. If you please to send twelve more I can dispose 
them to some other professors; 3 or 4 I would send for 
England to Mr. Oughtred, Mr. Barlow, and others, if you 
doe not youreselfe. I judge, by the leaves, that these coppies | 


4 
are part of some booke which you will shortly blesse the — 
world with, and hope that my expectation shall not bee in — 
vaine. Now, sir, 1 must thanke you for the honoure you i 
have done mee by using mee as an instrument in this youre © 
busines; truly I doe so well like the employment, and so — 
ressent this your favoure, that I confesse myselfe obliged to — 
bee, 

Youre most affectionate friend and humble servant, 

W. Perry. 
PS.—There are some in whom (as in him qui ex pede ~ 
Herculem, &c.) this your magnum opusculum hath begotten — 
such an opinion of your meritt that they resolve to live at — 
Amsterdam to receyve your instructions. j 


LETTERS ON SCIENTIFIC SUBJECTS. 83 


SIR CHARLES CAVENDISH TO JOHN PELL. 
[MS. Birch, Brit. Mus. 4278, fol. 153, Orig.] 


Hamburg, Aug. 3%, 1644. 


_ Worthie Sir,— Yesterdaye I received yours of the 4° of 
August, for the which I give you manie thankes. I heare 
nothing yet of our removing from hence, if we should remove: 
into Hollande I should be in hope to see you, and intended 
_ to see De Cartes, but you write he is gone to Paris. I desire 
your judgment of De Cartes his new booke. Doutelesse he 
is an excellent man. I hope Mr. Hobbes and he will be ac- 
- quainted, and by that meanes highlie esteeme one of another. 
Iam sorie Mr. Warner’s analogicks are not printed, but I yet 
_hope they maye, as also other worckes of that excellent olde 
man. I am glad you intend to secure your thoughts by pub- 
lishing them, and that you are printing Diophantus with 
_newe illustrations after your manner, which I am exceeding 
_ greedie to see, but I doute you will not in this worcke teache 
_ us the whole science of analiticks with all that pertaines to 
it, which if you doe not nowe, I beseech you doe heereafter, 
_ for I suppose you intended such a woorck, and if you finish 
_ it not, I doute wee shall have no better analiticks than wee 
have. I have not yet received your refutation of C.S. Longo- 
-montanus his quadrature of a circle, but I shall inquire dilli- 
_ gentlie for it, for I longe to see where he goes out of the waye. 
1am well acquainted with Mr. Gascoine, whoe was providore 
to oure armie: he is an ingenious man and hath shewed me 
howe perspectives maye be much improved; I onelie mislike 
his glass next the eye which he makes convex on both sides ; 
I tolde him it woulde make confused sight, if De Cartes his 
_ doctrine be true, but upon triall it proved more distinct than 
IT expected, yet I thinke a concave on that side next the eye 
would doe better; his perspective did not multiplie more than 
_ myne as I thinke, but his speculation is most true, and this 
was one of his first trialls and not made to the manner of his 
_ best inventions. Wee lodge neere St. John’s Church. And 
so wisshing you all happiness, I remaine 
. Your assured freind to serve you, 
CHARLES CAVENDYSSHE. 


Ep ne a 


— 
—— 


84 LETTERS ON SCIENTIFIC SUBJECTS. 


SIR CHARLES CAVENDISH TO JOHN PELL. 


[MS. Birch, Brit. Mus. 4278, fol. 155, Orig.] 


Worthie Sir,—Manie thankes for yours of the 3% of Sep- | 2 


tember. I am sorie for Beaugrand and Herrisons deathes, 


but I hope it will make you nowe seriouslie thinke of pol-_ | 


lishing and publishing your former thoughts of analiticks. I 


never sawe Harrison’s 6th tome, nor I thinke his 5th, yet © 
somewhat of algebra in those tomes I have, but nothingnewe | 
as I remember, or verie little. From Robervall and Fermat ~ 
I expect much. Nicerons perspective I thinke I have at Lon- 4 
don, and as I remember one hath manifestlie convinced his — 
booke of error; but if I mistake, and that you aprove of Ni- — 
cerons perspective, I desire you will send it me. Ifthere be — 
anie more than is in that little booke allreadie extant, con- — 
cerning the newe jomales, you shall doe me a favoure to send 
it me. I am extreamelie taken with Des Cartes his newe © 
booke, yet I thinke Kercher the jesuit of the loadestone | 
hath prevented Des Cartes, for they differ little as | remem- — 


ber; I confess I conceive not howe the particule striate by 


theyr motion can reduce a loadestone, or touched needle (for- — 
merly moved from theire meridian), to their meridian againe; 
or if they doe, the situation of the poles would be contrarie to — 


Des Cartes his description. I beleeve Mr. Hobbes will not 
* like so much of Des Cartes newe booke as is the same with 
his metaphisickes, but most of the rest I thinke he will. 
Doctor Jungius hath bin once with me, I like him extreamelie 
well, but I cannot speake Latin well nor readilie, which hin- 


dered me of divers queres, and besides I would not trouble — 


him too much at the first visit. I finde him verie free, and 


intend, God willing, to be better acquainted with him. He — 
approves of your confutation of Longomontanus, though he ~ 
seemed to thinke Long. would take exceptions that you use — 
tangents, which he refuses to be tried by. If Gassendes Phi- — 


losophie be extant I praye you send it me. I have not yet 

seen Mr. Tassius, but he sends me word he will come to me. 

They are commonlie full of business or els I would often visit 

them. I mervaile you have not received £5, which I paied 

to Mr. John D’Orvill longe since, who promised to doe it 

with all convenient expedition; but I hope you have received 
it before nowe. I have troubled you enough for once. 
I remaine your assured friend to serve you, 

CHARLES CAVENDYSSHE. 
Doctor Jungius preferrs the analiticks of the ancients be- 


LETTERS ON SCIENTIFIC SUBJECTS. 85 


fore Vietaes by letters, which he saies is more subject to 
errors or mistakes, though more facile and quick of dispatch, 
but I conceive not yet whye. 


SIR CHARLES CAVENDISH TO JOHN PELL. 


[MS. Birch, Brit. Mus. 4278, fol. 157, Orig. 
Hamburg, Oct. 38, 1644. 


Worthie Sir,—Manie thankes for yours of October ¥4,._ I 
conceive there might easilie be a mistake in the waie of re- 
turning that £5 to you, but I am glad you nowe have it. 
_ What difference there is between banck dollers and rixdollers 
I knowe not, but I intended you should receive to the value of 
£5 sterling ; if it want anie considerable sum I praye let me 
_ knowe it, for though the whole sum be not much considerable, 
yet the cosenage is. I received yesterdaie a letter from 
Mr. Hobbes, who had not seen De Cartes his newe booke 
printed, but had reade some sheets of it in manuscript, and 
seems to receive little satisfaction from it, and saies a friend 
of his hath reade it through, and is of the same minde; but 
by their leaves I esteeme it an excellent booke, though I 
thinke Monsieur Des Cartes is not infallible. Mersennus is 
gone towardes Roome. ‘Those bookes I desired might, I 

suppose, have nowe bin in print, for Mersennus mentioning 
them so manie months since, as worckes either printed or 
_readie for the press, made me upon that supposall desire them 
if extant. Mr. Hobbes writes Gassendes his philosophie is 
not yet printed, but that he hath reade it, and that it is as 


. big as Aristotle’s philosophie, but much truer and excellent 


Latin. Though you discommend Niceron for a vainglorious 
man, yet your naming of his booke commended it to me, yet 
not knowing certainelie whether I have it or not, and expect- 
ing a second edition, for the present I desire it not. I desire 
Gassendes his refutation of Des Cartes his Metaphisicks, printed 
in 4to.; and if there be anie other booke of philosophie or 


| mathematicks latelie printed, I desire it allso, especiallie your 


_ Diophantus, if extant, or anie thinge els of yours. I desire you 
will dispose of the remainder of that smalle sum I returned to 
_ your owne use. Manie thankes for the copie of Reitas letter. 
I admire his glass, and would gladlie buye such a glass, and 
t acquaintance with the frier and his workman by letter if 
could. 

Your assured friend to serve you, 
CHARLES CAVENDYSSHE. 


86 LETTERS ON SCIENTIFIC SUBJECTS. 


SIR CHARLES CAVENDISH TO JOHN PELL. 


[MS. Birch, Brit. Mus. 4278, fol. 159, Orig.] 
Hamburg, November 33, 1644. 


Worthie Sir,—Manye thankes for your letter, wherein you 
write that you have Apollonius 3 bookes of conicks in 
Arabick, more than wee had in the Greeck, and 36 authors 
more. I hope some of those are of the mathemathicks. 
Howsoever I dout not but they are worthie the press. I like 
extreamelie both the proposition and demonstration of Apol- 
lonius in your letter; and to my aprehension the expression 
of the same proposition in Mersennus his book is perplexed 
and no demonstration translated. 1 wonder Goleas hath not 
published it all this whyle; yet being nowe in your handes, 
I am not sorie he did not ; for I assure myself wee shall nowe 
have it with more advantage than the loss of so much time. 
Though I doute not but your explication of Diophantus will 
put us in to amore sure waye of analiticks than formerlie, yet 
{ suppose there is so much to be added and explained 
concerning analiticks that it will require a large volume, 
and I hope you continue your intention of publishing such 
a worke, which I beseech you thinke seriouslie of to publish 
with all convenient speede; for it is a worcke worthie of 
you. I have sent to inquire at Auspurge of the famouse 
Reieta, to procure me one of his best sorte of glasses, 
but I have yet no answeare. If your occasions will permit 
you, I shall take it as a favoure if you will visite my Lord 
Widdrington, nowe in his passage towardes France. And so 
wisshing you all happiness I remaine 

Your assured friend to serve you, 
CHARLES CAVENDYSSHE. 


SIR CHARLES CAVENDISH TO JOHN PELL. 


[MS. Birch, Brit. Mus. 4278, fol. 161, Orig.] 
Hamburg, December 4 a, 1644. 


Worthie Sir,—Manie thankes for your letter and Gassendes 
his booke, which I received by Sir William Carnabye. I am 
of your opinion that Gassandes and De Cartes are of different 
dispositions, and I perceive Mr. Hobbes joines with Gas- 
sendes in his dislike of De Cartes his writings, for he utterlie 
mislikes De Cartes his last newe booke of philosophie, which 


LETTERS ON SCIENTIFIC SUBJECTS. 87 


by his leave I highlie esteem of. Iam sorie the peevish Dane 
Severin diverts you from your better studies, for to my 
_aprehension Ml refutation is full and plaine, and the pro- 
position you builde on so obvious, that I thinke I could demon- 
_ strate it in } of an hour. I have not yet received answeare 
_ from Auspurge concerning Reita’s glass, but I perceive Mr. 
Hobbes esteemes neither of his glass nor beleevs his dis- 
_ coveries, for he is joined in a greate friendship with Gassendes. 
I writ to him Gassendes might be deceived as he was about 
the varieing of the perpendiculars ; he excuses him what he 
can. Mr. Tassius is sick, but I perceive hee is verie courteous. 
_ I have not latelie seen Doctor Jungius, but I have a greate 
_ opinion of his abilities. I desire to knowe if all Bonaventura 
avallieros worckes be to be had, as allso Sethus Calvisius 
_ worckes of musick, for I sawe heere but some fragments 
_ which Mr. Tassius lent me. You will excuse me that i 
_ requite not your favoures for the present, as I desire I can 
_ onelie yet acknowledge them, but shall heereafter by the 
_ grace of God endevoure to requite them to my power. And 
so wisshing you all happiness I remaine 
Your assured friend to serve you, 
CHARLES CAVENDYSSHE. 


SIR CHARLES CAVENDISH TO JOHN PELL. 


[MS. Birch, Brit. Mus. 4278, fol. 163, Orig.] 
Hamburg, December $4, 1644, 


Worthie Sir,—I hope you have received my letter which I 
sent last weeke by my brother’s servant. I have little to 
adde, but this inclosed concerning Reieta’s glass. I desire 

ou will be pleased to inquire if he be at Antwerp, and if he 
* to inquire of him if one of those glasses maye be had both 
sooner and at an easier rate. I desire by your next to knowe 
if Bonaventura Cavelliero and Sethus Calvisius of musick be 
to be had. I hope you have done with the waiewarde Dane, 
that you maye returne to Apollonius and Diophantes, but 
especiallie to your owne analiticall worcke, which I ex- 
treamelie desire to see. Mr. Hobbes puts me in hope of his 

hilosophie which he writes he is nowe putting in order, but 
Picare that will take a longe time. I confess I regret much 
from him and yourself; Mr. Doctor Jungius and Mr. De Cartes 
I hope hath not yet done. I expect allso some rarities in 


88 LETTERS ON SCIENTIFIC SUBJECTS. 


analiticks and geometrie from Fermat and Robervall, so that — 
I hope oure age will be famous in that kinde. And so wissh- 
ing you all happiness I remaine 
Your assured friend to serve you, 
CHARLES CAVENDYSSHE. 


SIR CHARLES CAVENDISH TO JOHN PELL. 


[MS. Birch, Brit. Mus. 4278, fol. 170, Orig.] 
Paris, June 27, olde style, 1645. 


Worthie Sir,—I give you manie thankes for your letter of 
May ;3,, which I received not longe since. I writ to youa 
letter from hence a greate whyle since, in which was one 
inclosed to Doctor Jungius, and a proposition demonstrated 
by Mr. Hobbes, all which I hope you have received. I have 
as you desire procured not onelie the approbation but demon- 
stration of your fundamentall proposition by Mr. Hobbes his 
meanes. Fermat is not in this towne, and Mersennus is on 
his waye hither, so that I knowe not whither to write to him. 
But I doute not but more handes with demonstrations 
might be procured if you desire it; I heare some of them 
wonder you would not publish a demonstration of it your- 
self. I tolde Mr. Hobbes I assured myself you coulde 
demonstrate it, and thought it more obvious than I perceive 
they thincke it. 1am glad you are publishing of Appolonius 
and Diophantus, though if Goleas meane to publish his 
Appolonius, I could be content you forbore yours, his being 
the perfecter copie, and he having bin at some cost about it, 
though I doute we shall be loosers by it, for I beleeve your 
notes would abundantlie recompence the defect of your 
coppie. I have not yet seen Bullialdes Astronomie, but 
Mr. Hobbes thinckes he hath not much advanced oure knowe- 
ledge. Mydorgius hath publisshed nothing of late, nor anie 
» of the rest more that I heare of. I hope you proceed with 
your analytickes, and that er longe you will publish it, for I 
expect not so much from anie man in that kinde as from your- 
self. I suppose you will one daye advance allso the doctrine 
of conickes and of other difficulties in geometrie. I knowe 
not when wee remove, nor whither; but when and where- 
soever I remaine 

Your assured friend to serve you, 
CuARLES CAVENDYSSHE. 


LETTERS ON SCIENTIFIC SUBJECTS. 89 


JOHN PELL TO JOHN LEAKE, 


[MS. Birch, 4280, fol. 94, Original draft.] 


Amsterdam, August 7th, 1645. 


Mr. Leake,—It is a yeare agoe since these inclosed papears 
were printed, and then upon this occasion. I found a booke 
of Longomontanus of 9 or 10 sheetes De Mensura Circuli, 
printed heere at Amsterdam since I came hither, but without 
my knowledge. I therefore thought good to give notice that 
it was done without my approbation, as knowing the measure 
to be false, as also to show a new way of refuting all those 
that make the circle’s area and periphery too great. And 
such another way have I of refuting all those that make the 
circle’s area and periphery oo little, if there be any such, for 
I doe not remember one example amongst all the foolish 
cyclometers that ever I saw. He that printed Longomon- 
tanus his booke, printed also my refutation, and that they 
might allwayes be joined, he added those numbers 73, 74; 
for Longomontanus ends in 72. I caused these my papers 
to be dispersed among the mathematicians all over Europe. 
I hoped that of those which I sent so long since to London, 
one might have come to your hands, but I perceived yesterday 
_by Mr. Sugar that you had not heard of it. I sent also one 
to Longomontanus, who answered ignorantly and scurvily ; 
and upon occasion of a letter written by me to a friend in 
Denmarke, he has lately published a second reply not 
altogether so monstrous as the former. Mr. Sadler hath a 
coppy of his first reply and of the Paris professor’s judgement 
of my refutation. I have received other mathematicians’ 
verdicts, onely I have as yet none out of England. My intent 
‘is to appeale the judgements of all those that by demonstrating 
2r*t 
r—t? 
selves able to judge of such a controversy. Therefore by your 
meanes I shall hope to obtaine a line or two subscribed by your 
Gresham professors, and as many other students as will take 
| the paines to demonstrate the first theoreme. Such I take 
| to be Mr. Gunton, Mr. Fiske, Mr. Leake, Mr. Bond, and 
_ some others better knowen to you than to me; which appro- 
bation and demonstrations I desire to have as soone as may 
be, because I would print them with my owne and those 
_which I have allready of other men’s, that so those ignorant 
dames may be so much the more confounded to set a thing 
demonstrated so severall wayes, which Longomontanus sayd 


my fundamental theoreme = a) can shew them- 


90 LETTERS ON SCIENTIFIC SUBJECTS. 


was indemonstrabile. And though now they begin to feare 
that it may be demonstrated, yet all the mathematicians in 
the University of Copenhagen cannot doe it, such shallow 
artists have I to doe withall. If any of our London ma- 
thematicians be unwilling or unable to write Latine, let them 
write English, or the catholicke language [a, b, c, + — &c.], 
and let me alone with the rest. Ifyou want more coppies 
of my paper, and Mr. Hartlib of Duke’s Place cannot furnish 
_ you, I shall send you as many as you desire; or if there be 
anything else wherein I may serve you, you shall allwayes 
find me 

Your assured friend and servant, 

Joun PELL. 

To his much esteemed freend, Mr. John | 
Leake, at his house by the Old Swan 
in Thames Streete, London, these I 


pray. 


SIR WILLIAM PETTY TO JOHN PELL. 


[MS. Birch, Brit. Mus. 4279, fol. 172, Orig.] 
Paris, November 8th, 1645. 


Sir,—Father Mersen his desire to convey this inclosed to 
you, serves me for an happie occasion, to expresse my thank- 
fulnes for the good of that acquaintance with Mr. Hobs, which 
your letters procured me for by his meanes, My Lord of 
Newcastle and your good friend Sir Charles Candish have 
beene pleased to take notice of mee; and by his meanes also 
I became acquainted with Father Mersen, aman who seemes 
to me not in any meane degree to esteeme you and your 
works, and who wishes your studies may ever succeede 
happily, hoping (as others also doe) that the world shall 
receyve light and benefitt by them. Sir, I desire you not to 
conceive that any neglect or forgetfulnes hath caused my long 
silence, for the often speech I have of you either with Sir Charles, 
Mr. Hobs, & Father Mersen (besides the courtesy I receyved 
from you) makes me sufficiently to remember you. But, to 
speake the truth, it was want of buisines worthy to make the 
subject of a letter of 16P postage, especially since Mr. Hobbs 
served you in procuring the demonstrations of other french 
mathematicians. 1 could wish with Sir Charles that wee 
could see your way of analyticks abroad, or if a systeme of 
the whole art were too much to hope for, for my owne part 


LETTERS ON SCIENTIFIC SUBJECTS. 91 


I could wish wee had youre Diophantus which was ready for 
_ the oar before my departure from you. Those rules of 
algebra (though few) which you gave mee and exercise have 
made mee able to doe many pretty questions. I entend to 
_reade no authour of that subject untill I may be so happie to 
_ reade something of yours. Sir, if there bee anything wherein 
_I might serve you, I desire you to use 
Your thankfull friend & humble servant, 
WivuiaM Perry, 


HENRY POWER TO SIR THOMAS BROWNE. 
[MS. Sloan. Brit. Mus. No. 3418, fol. 94.] 


Hallifax, June 13th, 1646. 


| Right Worshipfull,—I could not overslippe those kind 
_ respects, and faire expressions you pleas’d to shew towards 
me in Mr. Smith’s letter, without the returne of a few gratu- 
_ latory lines. The presentment whereof I cannot count a 
_ piece of presumption, since you layd me the foundation to 
_ worke upon. I cannott but really thanke you for the com- 
- munication of your opinion; I shall trace your directions, by 
which meanes I question not but I shall attaine to the utmost 
_ of my desires. My yeers in the University are whole up to a 
_ midle bachelaur-shippe, which height of a graduate I am 
_ sure ought to speake. him indefective in any part of philo- 
_ sophy. Our second yeere of sophistry is always taken up in 
_ physicall contemplation (without perfect knowledge whereof 
no cleere passage is granted to any in the commencement 
house), and I hope no materiall piece then passed my eie, an 
extract whereof is not remanent in my present selfe. Yet I 
shall (submitting to your maturer judgment) review the 
whole body of philosophy, especially naturall. The pleasant- 
nesse of which science (had not your desires concurred) might 
have re-invited me to that study. I intended to have seene 
Cambridge a moneth since: but some intervening accidents 
still quas’d my jorney: and now you know that supernaturall 
cause which prolongs my stay here. I hope the heavynesse 
of that hand will shortly be removed, and our colledge re- 
pupill’d, and then (God willing) I will increase the number. 
I shall waite there of your instructions: what physicall in- 
stitutions you please to appoint, I question not but the 
University affords; and I shall be ready to make use of them, 
and of each opportunity the weeke affords, wherin I may 


92 LETTERS ON SCIENTIFIC SUBJECTS. 


visit you by a paper-mercury. If (after I have finished the 
theoreticall part of physick) you will be pleased to induct me 
into some practicall knowledge, your commands shall fetch 
me up any time to Norwich; where I shall be very glad to 
weare the livery of, 
Sir, your obliged friend and servant, 
Henry Power. 

Our towne can furnish you with very small news, only the 
death of some of your acquaintance, viz. Mr. Waterhouse and 
Mr. Sam. Mitchell. This enclosed is from my father-in-law 
to your selfe: if your occasions will permitt the returne of 
a few lines to either of us by this bearer, wee shall be very 
glad to accept them. 


HENRY POWER TO SIR THOMAS BROWNE. 
[MS. Sloan. Brit. Mus. 3418, fol. 92.] 


Right Worshipfull,—The subject of my last letter being so 
high and noble a piece of chymistry, viz. the reindividualling 
of an incinerated plant, invites mee once more to request an 
experimental. oe s6% of it from yourselfe, and I hope you 
will not chide my importunity in this petition, or be angry at 
my so frequent knockings at youre doore to obtaine a grant of 
so great and admirable a mystery. *Tis not only an ocular 
demonstration of our resurrection, but a notable illustration 
of that psychopanuchy which antiquity so generally received, 
how these formes of ours may be lulled and ly asleepe after 
the separation (closed up in their Ubis by a surer than 
Hermes his seale,) untill that great and generall day when 
by the helpe of that gentle heat, which in six dayes hatched 
the world, by a higher chymistry it shall be resuscitated into 
its former selfe ; suamque arborem inversam in continuo esse, 
et operari, iterata preservabit. 

The secret is so noble and admirable, that it has envited 
my enquirys into divers authors and chymicall tractates, 
amongst which Quercita and Angelus Sale give some little 
hint thereof, but so obscurely and imperfectly that I have no 
more hopes to be ocularly convinced, through their preescrip- 
tions, then to be experimentally confirm’d, that the species of 
an incinerated animal may be encask’d in a piece of winter 
chrystall, as some other mineralists confidently affirme. 
Alsted, I confesse, in his Pyrotechnia, more cleerely describes 
the matter, but the manner of experimenting it hee utterly 


LETTERS ON SCIENTIFIC SUBJECTS. 93 


leaves unmentioned. ‘Therefore my only addresse is to you, 
hoping to find as much willingnesse to communicate, as ability 
to evince the certainty of this secret to 

The most engaged of your friends, 


Henry Power. 

R. Coll. Cambridge, 

Feb. 10, 1647. 

PS.—Sir, this enclosed is from a worthy friend of myne 
who hath made bold upon my incitement to enwrappe a few 
lines to you, if you please to repay us both but with one 
single answer, it will not only evince us of your faire accept- 
ance of them, but shall also challenge a double gratulatory 
as a due debt, in counterpoise and recompence thereof. 


WILLIAM OUGHTRED TO MR. GREATORIX. 


(MS. Ashm. 394.] 
Aldbury, Dec. 19th, 1652. 


Good Mr. Greatorix,—Give leave to intreate you to re- 
member my service to my good friend Mr. Lilly, and to 
enquire of him and other astronomers about London, what 
they have observed concerning a comet, stella crinita non 
caudata, now and for 11 nightes together as often as the skie 
was cleere, in manner as | shall describe. Upon Thursday, 
Dec: 9th, I first saw it, neere the East, about 7 of the clock 
at night, a round dim light, about 4 degrees of estimacioun 
from the head of the staire under the foote of Orion westward ; 
the diameter of it seemed to be 16 inches; upon Saturday 
at 11 at night it was ascended nere the shild of Orion, 
almost as a right line through both the shoulders, so that the 
comet and they were about an equall distance asunder ; 
then it went upward through the nose of the bull, till upon 
Tuesday night it was close, but a very small deale westward 
to the lowest star of the Pleiades. Upon Wednesday night 
it was come almost as high as the foote of Perseus, and upon 
Thursday night it was seene above the wing of that foote of 
Perseus westward higher then in a right line, through the 
star in that foote and the wing, and almost at their distance. 
The present Sunday, while I am writing, it is come within 
lesse than a degree of Gorgon’s eye, and } a degree to the 
east side. The motoun decresethe nightly, and so doth the 
diameter, especially for these latter dayes, being now become 
but in shew not past halfe so big as at the first appearance. 


94 LETTERS ON SCIENTIFIC SUBJECTS. 


You shall doe me a favour to write or procure to be written to 
me what hath byne observed by the astronomers about this 
celestiall appearance, and what judgement they give of it. 
Your very loving friend, 
WILLIAM OUGHTRED. 


H. THORNDIKE TO JOHN PELL. 


[MS. Birch, Brit. Mus. 4279, fol. 261.] 
December 23rd, 1652. 


Sir,—Mr. Tovey is gone out of towne and hath left mee 
to dispose of Mr. Warner’s papers, which I would have had 
done himselfe. I have therefore sent you whatsoever I can 
conceive to concerne the canon: beeing, (1) The canon itselfe 
from 1 to 100,000. (2) Acollection of papers sowed together, 
concerning (I suppose) the construction and use of it, in- 
titled on the front Tabularia. (3) Papers of Interest and the 
questions of it, sowed together. (4) A peece by itselfe of 
about halfe a quire, beginning with, “ Any ratio being given.” 
(5) The canon from 1 to 10,000. (6) A foule copy of the 
same, in which are bound up other loose papers concerning 
the subject. (7) Foule papers in nine bundles, which seeme 
to be the first copy of the large canon. And my request to 
you is, first that you will take your own time to peruse them, 
in order to a resolution of publishmg them, which, upon 
perusing them, I hope you will declare: and then in con- 
sideration of common casualties, and the uncertainty of 
my continuing where you are, that you will certify mee of 
the receit of the particulares. Which will bee very briefly 
done, if you think fit to sende mee this backe, with your 
name subscribed to a line signifying the receite of them. 
And here, Sir, my best love and service recommended, I take 
leave, and remaine, Sir, 

Your very loving freind to serve you, 
H. Tuornpikxe*. 


Lg From a note by Pell, at the back of this letter, it appears that the project of 
printing Warner’s works was relinquished on account of the incompleteness of 
his papers. 


if 
\ 
‘ 
i} 
, : 
? 
wal 
* 
Vall 
o; 
ih 
ny 
* 
k 
] 
i 
ini 
in; 
i 
E 


LETTERS ON SCIENTIFIC SUBJECTS. 95 


LIST OF MR. WARNER’S PAPERS. 
(MS. Birch, Brit. Mus. 4394, fol. 106.] 


An inventorie of the papers of Mr. Warner. 


1. A tract of exchanges in folio, containing eleven leaves, 
_ Anglice. 

2. Varronis sententia de tympanis illustrata, tribus foliis. 
3. A treatise of coines. 

4. Another of the same. 

5. A tract about ingotts. 

6. Another of the same. 

7. Opus Saturninum. 

8. A bundle containing thirty papers intituled “ Opus 
Joviale.” 

9. A small bundle intituled “ Observationes Westmonas- 
terienses.” 

10. A bundle intituled “ Monetary.” 

11. A bundle intituled “Generall rules of Warre and 
Fortification observed by the experience of Prichard Han- 
sard.” 

12. Six tracts sewed together intituled “ Tabularia.” 
13. The faire copy of a canon of 100,000 logarithmes. 
14. Canones analogici originalis. 

15. Schedz miscellanez. 

16. A bundle intituled “ Analogicks.” 

17. De monetarum homonimicarum zequivalentia. 
18. De resectione spatii. 

19. A treatise sic incipiens “ Any ratio being given.” 
20. A treatise thus beginning “ Of that columne.” 
21. A bundle “ de refractione definitiones.” 

22. A bundle intituled “ Mr. Protheroe.” 

23. A bundle intituled “Sir William Beccher.” 


December 14th, 1667. Received the abovesaid papers 
from Dr. Thorndyke, which I promise to restore upon de- 
mand—Joun Couuins. 


ANTHONY THOMPSON TO JOHN PELL. 
[MS. Birch. Brit. Mus. 4279, fol. 259, Orig.] 
November 22nd, 1658. 


Mr. Pell,—There is this day a meeting to bee in the Moore 
Feilds of some mathematicall freinds (as you know the 
custome hath beene) there will bee Mr. Rook and Mr. Wrenn, 


96 LETTERS ON SCIENTIFIC SUBJECTS. 


my Lord Brunkerd, Sir Pauel Neale, Dr. Goddard, Dr. 
Scarburow, &c. I had notice the last night of your being in 
towne from some of the gentellmen now named, and of there 
desire to injoy your company ; their will bee no such number 
as you usually have seene at such meetinges; 12 is the 
number invited. Sir, I hope you will excuse the short 
warning, for it was shorte to mee *. 
Yours to serve you, 
ANTHONY THOMPSON. 


PELL’S RELATION OF A MEETING WITH 
HOBBES. 


[MS. Birch, Brit. Mus. 4425, fol. 204, Orig.] 


Easter Munday, March 31, 1662. 


This morning Mr. Thomas Hobbes} met me in the Strand, 
and led me back to Salisbury house, where he brought me 
into his chamber, and there shewed me his construction of 
that Probleme, which he said he had solved, namely the 
Doubling of a Cube. Hethen told me, that Vicount Brounker 


* JT insert this letter because it is a curious memorial of the Royal Society in 
embryo. It is generally stated, that Dr. Goddard’s society terminated on the 
foundation of the one at Oxford, but this letter proves the contrary. As it may 
be interesting to the present members of the Royal Society, I insert here a copy 
of the original regulations of the Society at Oxford, from MS. No. 1810 in the 
Ashmolean Museum :— 

October 23rd, 1651, Order’d— 

1 That no man be admitted but with the consent of the major part of the 
company. 

2. That the votes for admission (to the intent they may be free and without 
prejudice) be given in secret; affirmations by blanks,—negatives by printed 
papers put into the box. 

3. That every man’s admission be concluded the next day after it is proposed ; 
so as at the passing of it, there be at the least eleven present. 

4, That every one pay for his admission an equal share to the money in stock, 
and two-third parts of it for the instruments in stock, answerable to the number 
of the company. 

5. If any of the company (being resident in the University) do willingly absent 
himself from the weekly meeting, without speciall occasion, by the space of six 
weeks together, he shall be reputed to have left the company, his name from 
thenceforth to be left out of the catalogue. 

6. That if any man doe not duly upon the day appoynted performe such exer- 
cise or bring in such experiment as shall be appoynted for that day, or in case of 
necessity provide that the course be supplyed by another, he shall forfeit to the 
use of the company for his default 2s. 6d., and shall performe his task notwith- 
standing within such reasonable time as the company shall appoynt. 

7. That one man’s fault shall not (as formerly) be any excuse for him that was 
to succeed the next day, but the course shall goe on. 

8. That the time of meeting be every Thursday before two of the clock. 

[t This Mr. Hobbes says he was born April 5, 1588.] 


LETTERS ON SCIENTIFIC SUBJECTS. 97 


_ was writing against him. “ But,” said he, “I have written a 
confirmation and illustration of my demonstration, and 
to-morrow I intend to send it to the presse, that with the 
next opportunity I may send printed coppies to transmarine 
_ mathematicians, craving their censure of it. On this side of 
_ the sea,” said he, “TI shall hope to have your approbation of 
it.” I answered that I was then busy, and could not per- 
suade myself to pronounce of any such question before I had 
very thoroughly considered it at leysure in my owne chamber. 

Whereupon he gave me these two papers, bidding me take 
_ as much time as I pleased. Well, said I, if your work 
seeme true to mee, IT shall not be afraid to tell the world so: 
but if I find it false, you will be content that I tell you so; 
but privately, seeing you have onely thus privately desired 
my opinion of it. ‘“ Yes,” said he, “I shall be content, and 
thanke you too. But, 1 pray you, do not dispute against 
my construction, but shew me the fault of my demonstration, 
if you finde any.” Thus we then parted, I leaving him at 
Salisbury house, and returning home. 


THOMAS BRANCKER TO JOHN PELL. 
(MS. Birch, Brit. Mus. 4278, fol. 36, Orig.] 
Tottenham, May 9th, 1666. 


Revered Sir,—I understand by Mr. Collins that you had 
my last, but are, as you had reason, offended at Mr. Pittes 
presumption. Little souls have little designs ; what his was, 
I know not, but I thought it not at present convenient to do 
any more than I did, viz: take notice that the letters were 
open’d and enquire by whom. However, I durst not con- 

_ ceal it. The man is I hope very fair; as to all other matters 

_ wherein I have dealt with him I have found him so. Possibly 
_he was hasty to see what assistance you were pleased to 
afford us. I am thus tedious about him, because I would 
_ fain entreat for him to procure his pardon. What I wrote in 
my last concerning the book, I again refer to your consider- 
ation, for as much as my design herein I hope is not sordid 
or mean; but the truest advantage that may be gained to the 
_ argument. I have now only to acquaint you that they have 


t in hand thetable. They omitte the first leafe, according to 
| what I hinted in my last to yourselfe about it. Only whereas 


_ Rhonius ordered the incomposits to be printed in a larger 
_ character when they first appear in the table, viz: where they 
H 


98 LETTERS ON SCIENTIFIC SUBJECTS. 


were roots; I have altered it thus, to put a rule either over 
or under the number, and let it be of the same body with the 
rest. For I presume the end of that different character was 
only to make it visible, and I conceive this makes it more 
visible and distinct, and besides it avoides that unhandsome 
intrenchment upon the page which you will find in the Dutch 
edition. But these things you will better observe when the 
first sheet comes to your hands, which I hope you will find 
well done. They goe on slowly, because the short rules 
between the descending parallels are very chargeable, and 
therefore they have no more than will compose 3 a sheet at 
once; so that they do but one whole sheet in a fortnight. 
I should be very glad to wait on you at London, could the 
health of that place invite you thither. In the mean time, I 
beg your candid interpretation of anything that comes from 
me in word or deed as to this matter, for as much as, if 1 know 
my own inclination, of all vices I am not disposed to deceit 
or impudence, and in this particular I have very cogent 
obligations to the contrary. I had written sooner but that I — 
was confined to my chamber by an ague, which, by God’s 


goodnes, is now removed, not without some small relishes of 


it, which I hope will passe away. It’s scarce pertinent to 
tell you that there was a report about town that you had left — 
this world for a better. Your own lines to Mr. Collins are a 
solid refutation. God Almighty continue your health and 
opportunityes to serve his glory, ’tis the prayer of, Sir, 
Your ever obliged to honour and serve you, 
Tuo: BRANCKER. 


THOMAS BRANCKER TO JOHN PELL. 


[MS. Birch, Brit. Mus. 4278, fol. 38, Orig.] 

Tottenham, June 21st, 1666. ‘S 

Honoured Sir,—By the hands of Mr. Collins I received 
your last on Friday, viz: 4 leaves of copy for the sheet P; _ 
but without any note for direction for printing therof, or by 
way of answere to anything of my last. This I only advertise 
you of that, if any such letter were intended, you may under- 


stand it was casually excluded the covert. I humbly thank — | 


you for the pains and accuracy in those papers, and I hope ¥ 


further directions for printing them are not altogether neces- — ; 
sary. I have transcribed them without any alteration, unlesse 


so far as was needfull to conform it to the marks wherein the 


LETTERS ON SCIENTIFIC SUBJECTS. 99 


_ presse differs from your Magen They will this day or to 
morrow have done with the table (as I suppose) and will be 
wholly imployed in the body of the book again as the med- 
_ dling with the table. Although readers and printers are all 
very willing to see it out ; yet, whenever you please, the presse 
shall be perfectly stop’t to attend you. I shall from time to 
time acquaint you where they be, and when they want further 
help, but no such addresses are intended to streighten you in 
your conveniencyes. If you please to put a title to the table, 
they may print that and the first leafe of the table, which I 
_ shall presently fall on proving once more, unles you have any 
body that can and will ease me and shew me the errata, which 
I hope will not be very many. My last tedious letter gave 
you an account of what I then thought necessary, nor have I 
now any thing else to adde thereabout. I beg your pardon 
for having been an occasion of so great a divertisement to 
you, wherein if I did not fear I had allready intrenched on 
your other occasions, I should have adventured to beg your 
assistance for generall direction in these studyes, and I have 
fancyed that 2 or 3 generall fundamental! notions would lend 
me no small light, untill God shall please to grant me the 
happinesse of further attendance on you. And | wish I might 
be as meet for future as I am thankfull for past communica- 
tions. In the mean time I must wait for an opportunity to 
serve you to my power. I commit you to God’s protection. 
Yours ever obliged to honour and serve you, 
Too: BRANCKER. 


THOMAS BRANCKER TO JOHN PELL. 


[MS. Birch, Brit. Mus. 4278, fol. 40, Orig. ] 
Tottenham, July 6th, 1666. 


Honoured Sir,—Your last of July 2 came to me July 5. I 
_ return humble thanks for the sheet therein enclosed. I have 
copyed it and purpose tomorrow morning to send to the press. 
The labour and time which the processe and copyes therof 
required must needs have been great, and much aggravates 
_ your bounty in the communication. And I cannot but, upon 
' occasion herof, adventure to expresse what hath been much 
_ in my thoughts before. I am very sensible what an occasion 
of trouble to you this my imperfect undertaking hath proved. 
' Which yet I can not say I repent of, because I can not ques- 
tion a considerable advantage to be reaped thereby by all in- 
rm H 2 


ae, 


Laisa ec ee pee mm gC cape ee a ee - oh 


100 LETTERS ON SCIENTIFIC SUBJECTS. 


telligent readers, and particularly because you have conde- 
scended not only to permission but favourable assistance : for 
which I dayly look on myselfe (as well as thousands others) 
as obliged to all gratefull acknowledgement as far as my pre- 
sent or future capacity may reach. My desire and serious 
study shal be to serve your interest, as far as I may understand 
it, and be accepted in my endeavours. I know the notions 
you bestow upon the treatise are not valuable even by jewells, 
but yet I see nothing litle or sordid in it for you to accept of 
some gratuity, although incomparably beneath the obligation 
you have laid upon us. If I might be so bold my request 
would be to have from you a hint of your thoughts concern- 
ing it. *Tis true Mr, Collins and I have discoursed hereabout, 
but he is not nor shal be in the least acquainted with the open 
proposall which my confidence of your pardon makes. Whe- 
ther he hath in his letters anything that looks this way I know 
not, but the full satisfaction I have of my own integrity to 
endeavour your truest service puts me on the adventure. And 
methinks it is much more respectfull to your goodnesse to be 
open and sincere, than either to expresse myselfe tenderly 
and obscurely, or, which is worse, to be altogether ignorant of 
what behaviour may become us in this present case. My 
bookseller I know will not be very unmannerly herin: and 
I would deal with him as from my own motion did I know 
what were proper, but he shall never know from me directly 
or indirectly that I ever scribbled a syllable about the affair. 
You need not fear any inconveniency in being free to me in 
this matter even as to your son. I am not so great a stranger 
to morality or conscience as to use such forward expressions, 
had I not uprightnesse to support them. And, although I 
may not despair of being an incomparable gainer by any 
service I can undertake for you, yet I conceive I am not 
herin selfish beyond what reverence and gratitude allow me. 
But if any thing in the premises be any way peccant and 
offensive, I submit to your correction and it shall be, if you 
please, as if it were unwritten. As for the book, the com- 
positor hath made your last papers fill a great deal of room, 
something of the paper of March 5 running into R, which 
loose print they ever told me their letters would needs require. 
I have written out the primes to above 30000, in the first 1OM 
I find 1227 (counting 1 for a prime, which possibly Guld: 
omitted, and so made 1226), in the 2d xM 1031, in the 3rd 
xM 983, in the 30000, 3241. But my purpose is to prove 
the whole table of incomposits again before I finish this ca- 
talogue. Mr. Collins hath lent me Kinckhuysen’s Conicks 
(in Low Dutch) and Mydorgius, on which I spend some time ~ 


LETTERS ON SCIENTIFIC SUBJECTS. 101 


_ about parabolicall draughts. If you please you may now 
keep a week or more before the press, but I shall undertake 
that it shall attend your leisure. I do not find I have order 
in your last to proceed to the xx1x. probl : and therefore ho 
to see your directions. I fear you give yourselfe the trouble 
to copy verbatim what you send me. I conceiv you might 
adventure to send me your only accurate draughts, and ease 
ourselfe of that labour, keeping the notions by you possibly 
in some other method. Begging your pardon and continu- 
_ ance of undeserved favours, | commit you to God’s care and 
protection. 
Yours ever to honour and serve you, 
Tuo: BRANCKER. 


_ CHRISTOPHER SAWTELL TO WILLIAM LILLY. 


[MS. Ashm. Oxon. 423, Orig. ] 
Waymouth, August 6th, 1666. 


Mr. Lilly,—I wrote to you the 18th of the former month 
concerning the wonderfull motion of the tide as it was care- 
‘fully here observed for 4 hours time, viz. July 17th, from 
about 10 in the morning untill 2 in the afternoone. I also 
wrote the same to the Post-office in London; notwithstand- 
ing which, it was put into the printed intelligence in one 
manner, and in the Gazette in another manner, and neyther 
_ of them aneere the truth, and for what eyther reason or po- 
licie I cannot imagine, but made me to be derided here, until 
I shewed a coppy to many of what I wrote them to London ; 
since which they reply if they print one false that is so won- 
derfull, how many us believe the rest, &c. Sir, I intreated 
_ you by my letter to have given me a few lines in answer that 
_ you had received mine, but to this morning I have not re- 
ceived any, which makes me doubt that you have not received 
mine, or else that you doubted the truth, or that it was not 
| of any worth. If it came not to your hand, pray be pleased 
| by a few lines to give me notice and I shall give you (if you 
| desire it) a very true, sure, and punctuall account of it, or in 
| any particular thing or accident that you shall require of it. 

_ If you doubted the truth [’ll assure you that to what I wrote 
_ you ther is not a title false, I am very confident, viz. that the 

sea did ebb and flow seven times in four hours time; with 
the rest of particulars writen you, to which a clowde, as it 
were, of witnesses will appeare; that there were many more 


102 LETTERS ON SCIENTIFIC SUBJECTS. 


ebbings and flowings it is probable to be true by the report 
of many ; which say that the sea did soe all the morning, and 
that it did soe likewise againe in the evening, but they say 
that this was not so violent; but this 4 houres time that. I 
gave you account off was as I have said, carefully observed 
by so many and that of the chiefest mariners, merchants, and 
other gentlemen, as well as other sorts of people, both men 
and weomen, one friend calling and sending for another, that 
to me it seemes an absurdity in the least to doubt the truth; 
the chiefe occation of observation being the extreame violence 
of it, one wherof I heard being in house, being talking with 
one, we had much pitty for a ketch there riding in the road, _ 
we thinking of a very great and suddent storme of wind, but _ 
looking out of doores found noe wind att alle, but saw the sea 
at a distance full of ravelling waves with much noyes. If not 
of worth to you, pray take the will for the deed. I aymed at 
the best. The thing to all persons of this town was and still — 
is wonderfull, and I thought it worthy of publique note, to 
which end I sent it to London preferring you before Mr. 
Gadbury, who otherwise had had the account. However, 
Sir, if you will not afford me no other account of it, you let 
me begg you to give me a few lines that you have received 
mine, that I may know that it came to your hand; and if by 
writing so presumptuously to you, strangers to each other, I 
have offended you, pray pardon me; it is but the second of- 
fence ; I hope I then shall not committ the third: yet in the 
meane while shall remaine, Sir, 
Your friend in what I may, 
CHRISTOPHER SAWTELL. 


For Mr. William Lilly, Astrologer, at the 
corner-house, over against Strand-bridge, 
these, in London. Post paid, 3d. 


THOMAS BRANCKER TO JOHN PELL. 


[MS. Birch, Brit. Mus. 4278, fol. 41, Orig.] 

Tottenham, August 17th, 1666. 
Much honoured Sir,—I conceived it unnecessary to trouble _ 
you with any line from me since the reciept of your last: sheet, — 
untill I could return it or part of it in print. This is now 
done, and you may please to send to Badiley for a sheet which — 

I presume my bookseller will send on Munday. In it the | 
fractions are very much amended. Mr. Collins tells me that — 


LETTERS ON SCIENTIFIC SUBJECTS. 103 


now they say if I had blamed them, they might have been 
corrected before. But as I have formerly written, I found 
fault at the first fraction that ever they printed and afterwards 
too. I conceiv they were not then so possessed with suffi- 
cient hopes of advantage so as to put them on the charge of 
_ new stamps, the procuring of which hath made this delay. I 
_ am now most taken up with making a catalogue of the errata 
in the table of incomp. which is necessary to be done before 
the catalogue of the incomposits themselves can be truly 
made. Sir, I return you my humble thanks for your candid 
acceptance of any part of my behaviour towards you in this 
businesse, of which my Lord Brereton hath been pleased to 
give me an hint. May there be anything of another nature, 
I shall thankfully accept of your admonitions, and, in a word, 
truly serve all your interest. We now hope for further di- 
rections from you at your next conveniency. At present you 
are no further interrupted by 
Yours, ever obliged to honour and serve you, 
Tuo: BRANCKER. 


JOHN PELL TO MOSES PIT. 


[MS. Birch, 4279, fol. 183, Original draft.] 
Brereton, June 3rd, 1668. 


Sir,— Yours of May 28 came to my hands May 30. Mun- 
day June 1, I sent a messenger to Newcastle, who brought 
me from you Mr. Brancker’s new book, more costly bound 
than I desired. I have turned it over, and finde it no way 
imperfect ; no sheet deficient, missfolded or missplaced. But 
the great number of press faults keepes me from writing to 
you for coppies for my friends, because I suppose they had 
rather tarry till they may have coppies corrected by my hand 
throughout. 

Your superscription, both of your letter and of the book, 
would have startled me, if I had been farr from this place. 
For in both you say John Lord Brereton, as if William Lord 
Brereton were dead and the title were fallen to his eldest 
sonne, whose name is John. But since yours, we have heere 
received letters from the father, by which we are assured that 
he is in health, and intends to begin his journey hitherward 
upon Friday June 5, about the time that this may come to 
your hands. I hope his Lordship will bring one of Deane 
Wilkins his bookes with him; or at least will be able to de- 


104 LETTERS ON SCIENTIFIC SUBJECTS. 


scribe it so to me, that I may guess of what bulk it is, and 
whether it be fit to binde blank leaves in part of it. And 
therefore I doe not now call for the coppy which you say the 
Deane hath left in sheets in your hands for me. Your care 
will preserve it entire, cleane and safe for 


Your assured freind, 


JOHN PELL. 
For Mr. Moses Pit, a stationer at the 
White Hart in Little Britaine. 


HENRY OLDENBURGH TO LORD BRERETON. 


[MS. Birch, 4280, fol. 42, Orig.] 
London, Sept. 22nd, 1668. 


My Lord,—1 pray your Lordship to accept of the enclosed 
print, which contains a tacit confutacion of the late French 
pretended miracle, said to be done in a village near Saumur ; 
the narrative of which was sent hither in French, and here 
translated and printed in English. I suppose your lordship 
hath heard of it, how that Our Saviour appear’d, by way of a 
picture on the altar, at the time of the masse, for a quarter 
of an houre, many people seeing it with astonishment, which 
afterwards was examined by the Bishop of Angiers, and de- 
clared for a miracle in print. I have sent a copy of these 
transactions to my correspondent at Paris, a true Huguenot, 
with a desire to render the first head of this book French, 
and to send it to the place where that appearance of Our 
Saviour was made, to undeceive, if possible, the poor people, 
and to discover the cheat of those clergymen, that would 
father a lye upon their God. 

I saw yesternight a cart leaden with at least 600 bricks, 
whereof each by weight weighed above four pounds, drawn 
by one horse in an uneven and ascending way, by a new con- 
trivance, which avoydeth rubbing much more than ordinary 
carts. It has been devised, as I mentioned formerly, by the 
concurrence of persons of several nations; and the patent of 
them is given in divers contry’s ; here, to the Duke of Mon- 
mouth, and to Sir Ellis Leyton (as hemself told me), and at 
Paris to some great persons; as also in Flanders. In the 


LETTERS ON SCIENTIFIC SUBJECTS. 105 


_ mean time, our mathematicall mechanicians doe not want ex- 
ceptions against the extraordinarines of the contrivance. 
ihe ie Oe ae ce 
Your Lordship’s very humble and faithful servant, 
H. O. 
For the Right Honourable the Lord Brereton 
at Brereton in Cheshire. Stonebagg. 


P.S. Mr. Hook presents his humble service to your Lord- 
ship, and begs the favor to send him some account of the 
causeway found so deep under ground, and of what shels are 

found in stones, or ligna fossilia &c. Whereby you will 
~ much oblige him. 


MICHAEL DARY TO JOHN COLLINS. 
[MS. Birch, 4425, fol. 54, r°. Orig.] 
The equation is this :— 
+ yt + 8 y? — 24 y? + 104 y —676 =0 


Mr. Collins,—I have beene lately trying to break biqua- 
dratique equations into two quadratique ones, and I have 
effected my purpose in a great many, some by the aliquote 
parts, and some by the cubicall mant, but this soure crabb I 
cannot deale with by no method, &c. 

3 Your servant, 
Micu: Dary. 
Tower, the 8th Febr: 1674-5. 


NOTE ON THE SOLVING EQUATIONS, BY JOHN 
PELL. 


[MS. Birch, Brit. Mus. 4432, fol. 26, Orig.] 
May 20, 1675. 


Mr. Dary only solved cubick equations by ayd of a qua- 
- dratick equation in a particular case, not knowing the use of 
both the rootes of his quadratick equation; but Collins 
knowing how to take away two tearmes in any equation 
hath a different generall method of solving these and higher 


f 


106 LETTERS ON SCIENTIFIC SUBJECTS. 


equations by ayd of logmes, or by his little table of continuall 
proportionalls for interest, whereby he finds two rootes at a 
time, and depresseth the equation two degrees. Whereas 
Deschartes cubick equation only serveth to breake a biqua- 
dratick equation into two quadratick ones, whereof the rootes 
are afterwards to be found, and a paire of rootes being by 
Collins method alwaies found, or two impossible ones re- 
mooved (by ayd of the rootes of pure powers and adfected 
equations) one degree lower than that proposed, it follows 
that solid problems are effected by plaine geometry, et pro- 
blema Deliacum tandem feliciter expugnatum. Deo gloria! 


JOHN COLLINS TO MR. OLDENBURGH. 
[MS. Birch, Brit. Mus. 4432, fol. 25.] 
May 25, 1675. 
Sir,---Be pleased to intreate the learned and worthy Mr. 
Tschirnhaus, to make a construction by a circle for finding a 
roote of either of these equations, which have the conditions 


he requires 
aaa—3aa+3a—1=N 


In which if a roote be 1 O 
2 1 Which are the cubes 
3 Nis 8 _ of numbers less than 
4 27 the roote by unit. 
5 64 


Or to this equation 
aaa+3aa+3a+1=N 


In which if a roote be 1 8 7 
2 27 Which are the cubes 
3 Nis 64 of numbers greater 
4 125 than the roote by unit. 
5 216 


And when he hathe demonstrated the same and illustrated 
the worke by examples in numbers he hath solved the Del- 
phick probleme with great renowne, and intreate him to make 
the same publick in the Transactions, the consequence of it 
will be that he hathe taken away the two first or highest 
tearmes in these equations, which renders it probable that 
the like may be done in other and higher equations, and 
consequently the difficulty that hath hitherto been crux in- 
genii will be removed ; this is the thing most wanting in ma- 
thematicks, and if he doth this, ’tis that I so much aspire after, 


LETTERS ON SCIENTIFIC SUBJECTS. 107 


and have methinks a prospect of methods that I hope will 
not faile in the attainment, consisting of two branches. The 
one to make such habitudes or co-efficients relating to two 
tearmes in an equation, that taking away one of them, the 
other shall vanish with it. The other to reduce such tearmes 
to those habitudes that want them, though something hath 
been done in this kind and not in vaine, yet there still is re- 
quired more still labour and time, than can be affoarded by 
his and 
Your most humble servitor, 
Joun Couuins. 


SIR SAMUEL MORLAND TO JOHN PELL. 
[MS. Birch, Brit. Mus. 4279, fol. 143, Orig.] 


Saturday, 13th May, 1682. 


Sir,—Not being able to wayt on you as yet (as I intended) 
I take the boldness to send you my first request in writing, 
which is to beg you to answer the following queres :— 

1. Supposing a foot to be divided into 12 inches, what is 
the number (and decimal parts) of cubick inches which are 
equal to the content of a cylinder, the diameter of whose base 
is 1 inch, and the height 12 inches? 

2. What is the number of cubick inches that equal the 
content of a cylinder, the diameter of whose base is 2 inches, 
and the height 12 inches ? 

3. What is the number of cubick inches answering to a 
cylinder, the diameter of the base being three inches, and the 
height 12 inches ? 

And if your leisure will permitt you, I would beg a table 
giving the number of square inches conteyned in the areas of 
all circles from 1 inch diameter, to a 100 inches diameter. 

And what trouble this shall give you, shall be acknow- 
ledged by 

Your most humble and faithful servant, 
S. Morianp. 


APPENDIX. 


I. Corrector Analyticus, or strictures on the Artis Analytice Praxis 
of Thomas Harriot, by Nathaniel Torporley. From the original 
manuscript preserved in the library of Sion College. 


Tractatum analyticum illum posthumum proximis diebus hisce 
promulgatum retracturo, triplex mihi incumbit negotium pro triplici 
rerum retractandarum differentia. Quedam enim ejusdem dictata 
(quis hoc credat? in mathematicis presertim quibus inservit de- 
monstratio, ut lapis Lydius ad segreganda a falsis vera, a tali vero 
presertim Coripheo mathematicorum credito, a talibus presertim 
recognitoribus summa fide et diligentia omnia describentibus) non 
solum controversa et dubia, sed etiam a veritate aliena, pseudola et 
falsaria. Que idcirco sunt accuratius discutienda, redarguenda et 
resecanda, ne vel decipiatur inter legendum artista, vel pre indicio 
damnetur assertor. Quzdam etiam sunt imperfecta et mutila, ne 
dum non ab ipso authore consummata, sed ne etiam, que ab ipso 
bene excogitata et scitu necessaria sunt tradita, ab ejus administris 
eadem promissa fide et industria posteritati transmissa. Neque vero 
est ut sese excusatos haberi preesumant a testata intentione sua illam 
precipue partem artis ornandi, que spectet ad resolutionem nume- 
rosam, accitis reliquis tantum obiter ejus ut puta introductionis. 
Collatis enim iis que erant propriz Harrioti ipsius inventiones, cum 
reliquis quas aliunde mutuum assumpsit: tam quidem in pusillo 
compingeretur sua ipsius inventa, quas proprias queesivit opes, ni- 
hil ut fuerit reliqui, si universa ejus inventionum farrago congera- 
tur, ad justi voluminis quantumvis exigui comprehendendam dimen- 
sionem. Itaque tertius ordo animadvertendorum talium esto pre- 
ceptorum que prius ab aliis tradita, facta levi aliqua mutatione in 
possessionem hujus authoris pervenerunt. Etsi illius modi aliena 
occupandi consuetudo adeo evasit usitata et familiaris, ut non solum 
licitum sed et laudabile videatur esse quod fuerit publicum. Prorsus 
ut mihi videantur scriptorum hodiernorum plurimi non tam authoris 
agere ad lectores docendos, quam scholares in ludis literariis, quando 


110 APPENDIX. 


dictata preceptore didicissent, memoriter eodem coram condiscipulis 
repetentis. Sed ut non dignum vituperio indico in alienam messem 
immittere falcem aliquam vel methodicam, vel expositoriam vel dic- 
taminis, dummodo debitus primevo servetur honos: ita nego plau- 
sum optime meriti de re literaria mereri cramben bis positam nedum, 
sed neque ullam inventionem, nisi illum que illecebris jubet et grata 
novitate moretur discentem. Atque hujus generis commissa, quando 
maximam partem occupent totius editi opusculi, otiosum fuerit sin- 
gula percensere. Suffecerit ergo eadem generalius et carptim per- 
strinxisse. Neque preterea erit opus has ita notatas tripartitas 
discussiones sigillatim et suo ordine sub quodam methodo reductas 
percurrere : quando quedam ex observatis pluribus ex his tribus 
censuris obnoxia sint, adeo ut que falsa sint, illa oriantur ex omis- 
sione jam latorum preceptorum; et que aliunde ascititia sunt, illa 
ex non recte intellectis antea traditis in falsa degenerent. Si ergo 
non servetur ordo in his recensendis, sed queris utrumque primo 
obvia examinentur, nihil retulerit, ordo enim et methodus ad fabri- 
cam non ad demolitionem inservit. Nam de excusanda stili ruditate 
non est ut laborem, decrepitus jam senex et jam moriturus. Altero 
demonstrationes satis illas ornatas, si ex omnibus rhetorum phaleris, 
uti que ornantur cibi puritate licet diminuta exprimautur. De reli- 
quis contendant aucupatores fame. Ego si dedecoris pristini labem 
abstersero, pulchre discedo et probe et preter spem. His ita brevi- 
ter prefatis deinde videamus quod Harriotus instauratus apportet 
bonive malive. Primo itaque de Harrioti methodo dicamus, cujus 
seepius mentio facienda est in sequentibus, ut constet et de prolatis 
et de pretermissis, ubi non possum non conqueri, illud ne male ha- 
bere quod ejus glossarii ita penitus transformarunt eandem, ut non 
solum non ordinem sed vix verbum ejus retineant. Id quod forte 
laude dignum esset, si alicujus illiterati fortuito inventa distribuis- 
sent. Sed cum hominis per eos in ccelum sublati et cui encyclope- 
diam summam ascripserunt, opera ita transmutarunt ut vix vestigium 
ab eo pressum appareret: quod non erat aliud quam confessio tacita 
alicujus deprehensz imperfectionis cul suppetias ita esse percuperent, 
aut saltem se illi fore preepositos crederent. Atque illius methodus 
illa erat. 

Primo accurata tractatio irrationalius surdorum sive, ut ille vocat 
eos, radicalium numerorum, non illa quidem aliena ab analytica arte 
confitentibus ejus interpretibus in sectione, sed totam artem omit- 
tentibus mixum. Nam si inutilis ad Exegesin, cur ejus ibi fecerunt 
mentionem? Si mentionem fecerunt, certe ut non inutilis, cur igitur 
non descripserunt ? 

His insuper addidit, veluti etiam preludia ad ipsam analyticam ; 
speculationem de numeris et binomialum speciebus, de extractione 
radicis quadratz e binomio plano, et quo plurimum sudavit (et illud 
forte necquidquam) de extractione radicis cubice e solido binomio, 
usque ad exhaustionem viginti septem aut octo chartarum. Nam 
solebat ad imitationem juris peritorum per chartas ab una parte exa- 
ratas, et per articulas simul colligatas, distribuere seorsim diversa 
documentorum suorum membra, ut ita homogenea unum in locum 


APPENDIX. lll 


reponerentur, prepositis quibusdam paragraphis plerumque literarum 
cum chartarum ascripto numero, ad satis methodicam inventionem 
cujuscunque particularis subjecti, quando ad illud relatio quomodo- 
cumque esset facienda. 

Quibus accesserunt, vel processerunt potius. Operationes logis- 
ticee in notis ita dicte ab Harrioto, ubi incipiunt ejus glossatores sub 
titulo. Logistices speciose quatuor operationum forme exemplifi- 
cate non ita scilicet magistraliter distanti illo. In ipso analytices 
artificio contentus trimembri divisione inscribit primam ejus partem 
ita. De generatione equationum canonicarum sub paragrapho d) 
compaginatis ad illud argumentum chartis 21 cum appendiculis duo- 
bus de multiplicatione radicum. 

Secunda pars autem sub titulo ‘ De resolutione «equationum per 
reductionem,”’ habet paragraphum e) chartas 29. item f a) chartas 7 : 
J 2) chartas quoque 7: et succedens illis in chartarum numeratione, 
Ff y) ad chartam f 18 y) cum appendicula sub lemmate duplici non 
illa contemnenda licet a suis omissa: Deinde f 6) charte 8. f e) 
charte 4. f £) item 4: Postremo seorsim sub signo gg charte no- 
vem continentes reductiones veterum ad Harrioti methodum revo- 
catas. 

Sed tertiam partem (non ita studio dissentiendi) cum Vieta in suo 
libro. De numerosa potestatum resolutione, et recte merito. Non 
totus fere est Vietzeus per exempla singula, et supposito paragrapho, 
et in chartis 13 sunt exempla tria quadratica quorum primum est 
suum, duo reliqua sunt Vietz, quinque cubice omnia Viete preter 
primum. Et quinque quadrato quadratica quorum quartum est suum, 
reliqua Viete. Et sunt ista secundum Viete methodum equatio- 
num omnino affirmantium. Altera ejus pars sub paragrapho 8) in 
chartis 12 habet cum Vieta habet analyticam potestatum affectarum 
negate quadratica 6 1) 62) 63) cubica 6 4) ad b 10) quadrato-qua- 
dratica 6 10) 611) 612). 

Tertia ejus pars sub paragrapho c) habet 18 chartas, tractat ana- 
lysin potestatum avulsurum cum Vieta, ubi radices sunt multiplices 
et singularum limites demonstrantur. Exempla hujus sunt quadra- 
tica duo, cubico-cubica 4, quadrato-quadratica duo. Sunt alia que- 
dam particularia hunc spectantia, de quibus suo loco. 

Hec est generalis ; et quantum poscit nostram propositam perbrevis 
ejusce methodi synopsis tam illa facilis et perspicua quam est septi- 
membris illorum distributio. Unde partem liquet e tribus illis par- 
tibus eam de numerosa resolutione totam esse usurarium et ipsum 
Vietam a capite ad calcem redolere, paucis, ut dixit Harriotus, mu- 
tatis. Illa autem pauca cujusmodi sunt? que certe non nihil com- 
pendii precepto afferunt, sed et que nihil negotii adimunt operatione. 
Ex sequentibus etiam patebit secundam partem reductionum Vietam 
agnoscere parentem ex parte maxima, alioqui alios precedentes ha- 
bere authoris: ut nihil ex toto volumine in genere reliqui supersit 
Harrioti proprium preter primam generationis partem, quam certe 
non numerito dixerit quis fabricam vel officinam nihili; non quod 
nihil exinde boni oriatur, sed quod ex nihili ingeniosa tractatione, 
totum illud quodcunque sit (quod sane non est contemnendum in- 


1] 2 APPENDIX. 


ventum) derivetur. Nam ex hypothesi primo quidem si negetur 
idem de eodem sese nihil reliqui superesse, ut posito a < 6, tum 
a—b < 0, deinde si vel in se nihilum duratur vel in quantitatem 
quamcunque positivam produci quoque nihilum (veluti si posita 
quantitas c, duratur in a—6, quod ob primum hypothesin valet ni- 
hil, tum erit ac—bec nullius amplius valoris) universam canonem 
omnium administrationem subtili certe prosecutione deducit. Et 
hoc (namque confidentius illud attestor) non sine divine providentize 
manuductione accidisse credendum est. Ut qui toties illud genti- 
lium axioma inculcasset (ex nihilo nihil fieri) ipse sese erroris dam- 
nerat; ex nihilo tot et tam speciosa artis depromerat miracula. Ut 
quum ipse tam ens mortale entia tot, et illa immortalia quo dum- 
modo ex nihilo generet; rogatur nolens volensve confiteri imrorta- 
lem Deum, potentissimum, optimum, maximum, non tam sapientis- 
simum, quam ipsam sapientiam summam, omnipotentie suze prero- 
gativa posse ex eodem nihilo ipsam entium visibilium et ad interitum 
festinantium compagem creare. Sed ne declamatoris partes potius 
quam demonstratoris agere videar, opportunum est ad examinandum 
veniamus, ecquid habemus in illo tractatu posthumo quod contem- 
namus, idque apodietica censura castigemus. Qua in re, missa 
cunctatione ad ipsum singulum rescindendum protinus accedemus ; 
ut accuratius ventilata absurditatem una et ex probatis cognito posse 
tales aretis antesignamus cellabi; de cetero sine preejudicio authori- 
tate quantumcunque famosorum posthabita, in hoc ipso imitemur 
Aristotelem, ut sit nobis charissima veritas, ne excepto ipso Platone. 
Sic igitur accipe, et crimine ab uno, disce omnes horum infirmi- 
tates. 

Sunt in dicto opere et in sectione ejus tertia, problemata tria im- 
mediate sequentia, scilicet decimum nonum, vicesimum, et vicesimum 
primum, que paraphrastes fatetur non bene sese intelligere, et ideo 
referre reductiones zquationum illarum ad meliorem inquisitionem : 
nihilominus describit eas tanquam reducibiles sub hac forma. 


ProsieMa 19. 


/Equationem quadrimoniam 
aaaa—baaa+bcaa+bcda 
—caaa—bdaa+befa=bcedf 
+daaa—cdaa—bdfa 
+ faaa—bfaa—cdfa 
—cfaa 
+dfaa 


posito 6 + c=d + fad binomiam 
aaaa—bbba—bbbe 


—bbca=bbce 
—beca—bdbccec 
—ccca 


reducere, sublatis scilicet gradibus aa et aaa. 


Pa SE ee, PS RP sre ie 


APPENDIX. 113 


| Prosiema 20. 
ARquationem quadrimoniam 
aaaa—baac+becaa+beda 
—caaa—bdca+bcfa=—bedf 
+daaa—cdaa—bdfa 
+faaa—bfaa—cdfa 
—cfaa 
+dfaa 
posito be+ df=bd+cd+bf+ef 
ad binomiam aaaa— bbbaaa 
—bbcaaa bbbcece 


—becaaa~ bh 4 bc4+ ce 
—cecaaa 


bb+be+ce 
sublatis reducere scilicet gradibus a et aa. 


Propiema 21. 
A®quationem quadrimoniam 


aaaa— baaa + bcaa+ beda 
— caaa— bdaa+ becfa= — bedf 
+ daaa— cdaa — bdfa 
+ faaa— bfaa—cdfa 
—cfaa 
+ dfaa 
positod+ f=b+e 


ad binomiam aaaa — bbaa 
= bbhee 
— ccaa 


_ reducere, sublatis scilicet gradibus a et aaa. 


Istze sunt tres ille reductiones preclare zequationis ejus quadrimo- 
niz ad tres binomias, seu mavis generationes binomiarum, que ad 
- resolutionem numerosam magis sunt accommodz, utpote que sint 
minus affectionibus oppresse. Quz quidem glossariis Harrioti forte 
viderentur sufficere ad praxin suam exigeticam excercendum. Sed 
non iste similiter mihi sufficiunt ad facultatis specimen ut consultet 
ne etiam pauld penitus rimasse Harriotica. Nam restat in adversariis 
ejus omissus modus secundus generandi binomiam equationem pro- 
blematis decimi noni ubi tolluntur gradus aa et aaa, idque ab illa 
zequatione quadrimonia qua describitur in propositione undecima 
sectionis secunde inter originales, nec locum sortita est inter reduc- 
titias. 

Ut igitur accuratius de Harrioti dormitatione statuamus et simul 
- constet in mathematicis zqué atque philosophicis zquivocam gene- 
rationem posse reperiri. Sic igitur se habet apud Harriotum in 
I 


114 APPENDIX, 


d 72°) sed quia sordent illis locutiones Harriotice eminemus potita 
phrasi paraphrastarum. 
aaaa — baaa + bcaa — beda 
— caaa+ bdaa + befa= + bedf 


— daaa+cdaa-+ bdfa 
+ faaa —bfaa+ecdfa 


—cfaa 
— dfaa 
ad binomiam 
aaaa— bbba _ 
<bbs—0 ee 


— beca — bbece 
— ceca — bece 


vel per conversionem 
signorum ut vult Harriotus bbbe = bhba 
bhec + bbca 
bece + beca 
+ ceca—aaaa 


reducere, sublatis scilicet gradibus aa et aaa. 


Et ignoscant, uti spero, si sequendo authorem, non adeo cum illis 
fuero sollicitus, ut signa intervertam cum illis, quo ponatur summa 
potestas affirmativa, etsi ab eltera equationis parte sint homogenea 
negativa, quod aliquid in se saltem habet indecori, sed nobis minutia 
non sunt animadvertenda. 

Et ad correctionem horum problematum accedens, utar tali argu- 
mentatione nam sunt et nobis syllogismi, me licet hostis inter alia 
convitia et hoc criminaretur domino Petworthie quod essem dialec- 
ticus ignarus. 

Si sit possibile ut ex equatione quadrimonia generetur binomia 
necesse est ut in gradibus ablatis coefficientes utrumque negativa 
sint zequalibus coefficientibus affirmativis sed in hisce problematis 
impossibile ut coefficientes utrinque (hoc est in utroque gradu ablato) 
negativa sint zquales coefficientibus affirmativas. 

Ergo, 

In hisce problematis non est possibile ut ex zquatione quadrimonia — 
generetur binomia. | 
Contra majorem propositionem peccant paraphraste puerilius, con- 

tra minorem peccat Harriotus inconsideratius. 

Sed ad primum errorem castigandum paraphrastarum scilicet qui — 
ex posita unica zqualitate, puta +c = d+/ in problemate 19 et 21 
etbe+df=bd+cd+bf+cin problemate 20, non est ut multum la- 
boremus. Ipsi enim suo indicio sibi ipsis opponuntur in locis plurimis — 
reductionum suarum, ubi inferunt hec verba in equatione proposita 
per particularium contradictionem eliditur gradus primus, secundus, 
vel tertius, et tollantur contradictoria redundantia, item rejecto re- 


—— ~ = —— 
7 


: gradus . 

_ merito illud quidem. Nam si imequalitate existenti inter partes 

ejus affirmantes et megantes: si excessus fuerit penes aflirmantes 
aufertur ex illa parte equationis tanto plus justo quantum est diffe- 
rentiz partium coefficientes in gradum ablatum ducta. Sin autem 
exuperent negantes tantumdem excedet illa pars equationis ipsum 
est, ut ad unicam positam zqualitatem coefficientis partium inferatur 
ablatio plurium quam unius gradus parodici. Quod ipsum satis erat 
notum Harrioto. Nam in singulis illis ejus paralogysmis assumit ut 
m confesso duplicem partium duplicium coefficientium xqualitatem 
ad binos quosque tollendos gradus. Et hoc facilius admisit incom- 
modum quia in precedentibus ad tollendos gradus tantum singulos, 
eadem zqualitates partium coefficientis unius cujusvis qualiter in- 
serviebant quo facilius introducta est hypothesis equationis gemine 
partium, quz contra minorem argumenti esse nostri propositionem 
militat et jam nunc nobis sed majori conamine et mactimis validio- 
ribus oppugnanda est, sequentibus premissis lematiis. 


Lemma primum. 

Si quantitas aliqua semel atque iterum bisecetur inzqualiter : 
factum a partibus minoris inequalitatis, et differentie quadratorum 
dimidiarum differentiarum inter partes inzequales. 

Esto quantitas a 4 divisa primo in ¢ puncto in duas partes ine- 
quales ac, cb, deinde in duas alias ad, d5, ubi inequalitas prima 
inter @ ¢,¢4 minor est | a 5 Snare * 5 me- 
qualitate secunda inter a d et d, et sequitur propositum. 

Nam tertio divisa eadem in partes equales ac, eb, per52 est 

factum ex ac, cb, cum quadrato ce xquale quadrato semissis scilicet 
e6: atque etiam factum ex ad, 6d, cum quadrato ad equatur eidem 
semissi ergo et equantur invicem. At ec et ed sunt dimidi diffe- 
rentiz partium ac, cb et partium ad, db, ergo facta a partibus cum 
quadratis dimidiarum differentiarum, sunt invicem zqualia, et ablato 
ab wzqualibus quadrato minoris differenti e ¢ erunt residua qualia, 
nimirum factum ex ac, c5 equale facto ex ad, d6 cum differentia 
quadratorum ec, ed, dimidiarum puta differentiarum, ut erat propo- 
situm. 
Jordanus in 20 primi ex hypothesi hujus propositionis infert aliam 
conclusionem, licet aliis verbis factum scilicet e partibus differentie 
minoris @ c,¢6 zquari et facto e partibus reliquis et facto ex diffe- 
rentiis alicujus unius partis prime divisionis et partium singularum 
divisionis relique ; ut sit factum ex ae, ¢b equale facto ex ad, db, 
et facto ex differentia inter ae, ad, et differentia inter ac, d 5, quod 
instar corollarii poni potest. 


12 


116 APPENDIX. 


Lemma. 


Si quelibet due quantitates bisecentur ineequaliter ; que fiunt ex 
quatuor producta e singulis partibus unius in singulas partes alte- 
rius, equantur producto quod fit a totis in se ductis. 

Hujus lemmatis non est e longinquo accersenda demonstratio 
cum sit proposito idem cum primo secundi Euclidis quamvis gene- 
ralius enunciata, ad omnes species quantitatis comprehendas, et 
quasi reciproca ejusdem repetitio... ..ared. 


II. The Autobiography of Sir Samuel Morland, in a letter addressed 
to Archbishop Tenison. From the original manuscript preserved 
in the library at Lambeth Palace. 


[ MSS. Lambeth, 931, Orig. ] 


Srr,—I am not ignorant of the various reports of the excessive 
prodigalities and other sins of my youthful daies, that have now for 
a long time been spread abroad by the credulous and censorious 
world ; especially since it has pleased Almighty God of late years, to 
visit mee with manifold crosses and afflictions which have kept al- 
most as exact time and measure as formerly did Job’s messengers. 
And farr be it from mee to act the pharise’s part, or plead my inno- 
cence, in any other terms, | : 

However I have thought it necessary, (being sensible of my 
mortality, and knowing well that I address myself to a true Natha- 
niel, in whom there is no guile!) to make you my confessor, and to 
give you an abbreviat of the history of some part and passages of 
my life, being willing to carry the rest into the grave with mee, by 
reason of the circumstances of the age wee live in, there to bee 
buried in oblivion. 

Having received my education in Winchester Colledg,I was re- 
moved to the University of Cambridg, where having spent nine or 
ten years, I was sollicited by some freinds to take upon mee the 
ministry, for which, fearing I was not fitly qualified, I betook myself 
to the study of the mathematicks. Soon after, an occasion present- 
ing itself, I accompanied an ambassador, (among several other gen- 
tlemen) sent by the protector to the queen of Sweden. At my re- 
turn, I was recommended to Secretary Thurlo for an assistant, and 
in a few months time after, sent by Cromwell as an envoy to the 
duke of Savoy in behalf of the protestants of the valleys of Pied- 
mont, And from thence to Geneva, as his resident, to manage the 
affayrs of those poor people together with other forraign ministers, 
as likewise to transmitt the moneys collected in England for their 


APPENDIX. 117 


releif, and to prepare minutes, and procure records, vouchers, and 
_ attestations, for the compiling of an exact history of the Waldenses. 

That negociation being ended, and having exposed an account at 
my return of the whole transaction to a select committee of gentle- 
_ men who were appoynted by Cromwell to examine particulars and 

make their report, as appears by their certificat marked (A)*, regis- 
tered in the council books, of which I have the original, I was ad- 
mitted into the most intimat affayrs of state; where I had frequent 
opportunities of taking a clear view of all proceedings from 41 to 
56, and so forwards for severall years. 

Amongst other intrigues, I was an ey and ear witnes of Dr. He- 
wet’s being inhumanely trepann’d to death (together with several 
other persons of quality) by Thurlo and his agents. For instance, 
one Dr. Corkor was sent by Thurlo to Dr. Hewet to advise him and 
desire him on the behalf of the royalists, to send to Bruxels for 
blank commissions from Charles 2nd. And when those commissioners 
were come, was ordered to desire to bee employed by him to di- 
sperse part of them into several counties and to keep the rest by him, 
which done he was seized on, together with those commissions, and 
condemned by a High Court of Justice, and at last cruelly executed. 

I was likewise privy to a design which was carried on by Sir 
Richard Willis (whom Charles II. trusted with all his affayrs in 
England) from a year before Cromwell’s death to the rising of Sir 
George Booth (afterwards L. Delamar) for giving up the person 
of his majesty. At which time, the said Sir Richard Willis, by the 
appointment of Secretary Scott, and one person more (‘Thurlo being 
now out of employment) hired a great house called Weston Hanger, 
in Kent, moated about, and situated for the purpose, and then ad- 
vised and pressed Charles II. with all diligence to come for England, 
and reside in that house for the better encouragement of those who 
should rise in arms for his restauration. 

To this proposition the king readily consented, and the day of his 
setting out from Bruxels (as I remember) was appoynted, and notice 
thereof being given to Scott by Sir R. Willis, there were several 
thousands of chosen men arm’d cap-a-pé, who had instructions to 
place themselves round about in woods and as privately as was pos- 
sible, and upon the watchword given that the king was enter’d into 
the said house, to rush in and murder him and all his followers in a 
hurry, so as it might never be known by whose hand he fell, which 
was thought by the contrivers a much better method than formally 
to bring him to a tryal before a High Court of Justice, as they had 
don his father. 

Now the horror of this and such like designs to support an usurped 
government, and fearing to have the king’s blood layd another day 
in foro divino to my charge, (there being no person but myself, 
and the contrivers, and the cheif of those who were to act it, privy 
to it); and calling to remembrance Hushai’s behaviour towards 


* This paper marked (A) and entitled “Certificate of the committee for Piemont 
concerning Mr. Morland’s negociations for the protestants of the valleys,” is pre- 
served in the same volume, and is apparently the only one now remaining. 


118 APPENDIX. 


Absolom, which I found not at all blamed in Holy Writt, (and yet 
his was a larger step than mine, I having never taken any kind of 
oath or made any formal promise that I ever remember to any of 
those governments); as likewise seriously reflecting upon those 
oaths of supremacy and allegiance which I had taken during the 
reign of Charles I. at Winchester Colledg, I took at last a firm re- 
solution to do my native prince, and the rightfull heir to the crown, 
all the service that should lay in my power. And here I cannot 
cmitt to observe, 

1. That this juncture of time was the darkest moon of all that 
king's reign, atime when hee was in a manner abandoned by almost 
all his neighbouring princes and states, and miserably betrayed by 
many of his domestic servants, and some of those in whose hands 
were all his secrets and principal affayres. A time when he was 
in great distress for moneys, that being prest by Sir Richard Willis 
to send him fifty or sixty pound, as oft as hee sent him over new 
instructions, which was usually once a month (though at the same 
time hee had much greater sums conveyed to him by my hands in 
dark nights and obscure places such as the Vine Tavern in Holborn, 
hackney coaches, and the like!) His Majesty was frequently forced 
to pawn his plate or jewels, and as I remember, once to sell his 
coach horses to supply him. All which misfortunes Sir Richard 
Willis having enumerated and illustrated in a letter of his to mee 
about the same time to encourage the king’s enemies here, pin’d 
the basket, and closed his letter with this paragraph, verbatim, viz., 
And now I know not what power that little king has left him, unless it 
bee to command his followers to run madd as they please. 

2. This was a time when I lived in greater plenty then ever I did 
since the king’s Restauration, having a house well furnish’t, a suffi- 
cient number of servants and attendants, a very good coach and 
horses in my stables, a revenue of above a thousand pound per 
annum to mainteyn it, and several hundreds of pounds of ready 
money by mee; and a beautiful young woman to my wife for a 
companion. Now the giving myself up to serve the king was not 
onely to hazard all this, but to live in dayly expectation of bemg 
taken out of my bed or house, and drag’d to the torments, and there 
had my flesh pull’d off my bones with red hot pincers; these were 
Thurloe’s own expressions how they had dealt with mee had they in 
the least suspected mee. 

3. Had ambition been and titles of honor been what I aym’d at, 
whenever the king should be restored; so little appearance was 
there at that time of any such change, and such characters were 
then given of the king’s person, that to rely upon a promised honor, 


would have seemed no other then building castles in the ayr, and a 


hundred pound for the purchase of a Gartar would have been 
thought a desperate adventure. 

4. Had gold been the god I then worship’t, I had fayr opportuni- 
ties, as its well known whilst I resided at Geneva, to have gone 
away with above twenty thousand pounds into some remote corner 
of the world, where the power then in being could never have 


~ ee oo Py Ge ees - 
(eT Ferriss oa Neca emir moron ime TED EIT os 


3 
* 
nt 

i 
| 
bs | 
var 
ft 
Rk t 


Nha ns 2 CUT, MEM 


So oie ne ee 


APPENDIX. 119 


reacht mee. Or I might have accepted at my return of a much 
greater sum to have timely discovered the whole design of Crom- 
well’s expedition into the Indies for the Spanish gold; all those 
eo and instruments being either in my view or in my cus- 
tody. 

Whoever shall seriously consider the foregoing observations will 
hardly believe that any self ends, (though possibly they might, by 
the pravity of man’s nature, and the subtilty of the Divel, bee in- 
jected into the fancy) could possibly outwey the considerations of 
duty and conscience in such an undertaking as this of mine was, in 
the blackest and worst of times. 

Having now resolved upon the end, the next thing was to con- 
trive the means of effecting it. And having made choice of one Ma- 
jor Henshaw, (whose life I had some time before saved, he bein 
’ one of the forty men who had sworn neither to eat or drink till they 

had killed Cromwell) I gott him to send a letter to Charles 2nd. 
by one of his confidents, to acquaint him that there was death in 
the pott, if ever hee entered within the doors of Weston Hanger. 
This letter happened to bee put into his hands, as hee had one of 
his boots already on, and was drawing on the other, to ride post 
towards the water side, in order to his coming over, as Sir Richard 
Willis had advised him, for the encouragement of his party. This 
letter putt a stop to his journey, but with much difficulty, the king 
being made almost believe, by the lord of Ormond and others, that 
this was onely a stratagem of the protector, to throw dirt upon his 
beloved favourite, and so to spoyl his best design. 

However, the king sent mee an answer marked (B), whereupon I 
dispatch’t Major Henshaw himself, with a second letter, and ac- 
companied it with several long letters, all written with Sir Richard 
Willis his own hand, discovering from time to time all the king’s 
secrets, and whatever His Majesty had entrusted him with. 

To this the king sent mee a second letter marked (C). 

With one of these letters came a privat paper, as from the king 
(but in truth from the chancellor himself), ordering mee to send him 
in another privat paper an account of his chancellor Hyde, and 
what I knew of him, for hee was then accused of corresponding 
with Thurlo, and receiving moneys from Cromwell. I believing it 
came really from the king, sent such an account as it seems did not 
very well please his lordship. And Hinc ille lachrime! From that 
time hee became a mortal enemy. 

» When I went over to Buda, upon the king’s Restauration, the 
chancellor charged mee not to ask any thing of the King, till he 
came into England, His Majesty being resolved to give mee more than 
in modesty I could petition for. But when I had wayted in 
England till all things of moment were given away, and at last de- 
sired to know what the king designed for mee, his answer was, 
zounds ! what the Divel would you have ? 

Before the king’s coming over, by Major Henshaw’s and his 
confidents privat agreement, as I believe with the chancellor, my 
wife was made believe that there was a patent brought over and hid 


120 APPENDIX. 


under ground to give mee the Gartar, and make her a dutchess, as 
being descended from a noble family in Normandy, which was a 
truth, and they had so far possest her with this vain imagination, 
that shee, desiring mee to walk with her privatly into the garden 
of my countrey house, a little beyond Bow, she conjured mee upon 
her knees in the face of Heaven to promise and swear to grant her @ 
certain request, which was never to ask any thing of the king but 
let him do as hee pleased. And when I pleaded with her, and 
foretold her what really fell out afterwards, her answer was this— 
The misfortune fall upon mee and my children. 

The king being restored, all his promises ended in a patent for a 
baronetcy and a gentleman’s place of the privy chamber, which was 
onely a place of great expence, and cost mee at the coronation 450 
pounds in two days. And after I had, by the chancellor’s order as 
from the king delivered up the first letter into His Majesty’s own 
hand, where hee had promised mee the Gartar, &c., I had given mee 
a pension of 500 pounds per annum out of the post office. But be- 
ing forced to live at a great expence, and lay out great sums in 
taking out patents and riding at the coronation, &c., and so run 
myself in debt, there was one sent to mee to give mee an alarm, that 
the Duke of York would have the post office settled on him, and 
my pension would bee lost, and,I should do prudently to sell it, 
and there was a chapman for it, which was Sir Arthur Slingsby, 
who had it for a summ much beneath its value, and as I[ heard after- 
wards, hee bought it for the Lady Green, with the king’s money. 

Now finding myself disappoynted of all preferment and of any real 
estate, I betook myself to the mathematicks, and experiments such 
as I found pleased the king’s fancy. And when I had spent 500/. 
or 1000/., gott sometimes one half, sometimes 2 thirds of what I had 
expended. Sometimes I had pensions, sometimes none. And care 
was taken by the ministers of state (under whom I was forced to 
truckle, wayting oft at their doors among the footmen) that one 
thing should bee spent before I gott another. One while I was 
made a commissioner of excise, paying part of it to one who had 
procured it. But in a few years being run in debt by chargeable 
experiments I was forced to part with it. At last, with much ado, 
I gott those pensions that I have of late years enjoyed, but they 
being very often stopt, I was at great loss and expence, borrowing 
money at 50 in the hundred and so anticipating my pension. 

About two years before the king’s death, hee sent mee into France 
about that king’s water-works, and I borrowed near a thousand 
pound upon my pension (to repay the dowble to those who lent it) 
to prepare models and engines of all kinds for that expedition. But 
I was no sooner arrived there but the lord treasurer by his Majestyes 
permission stopt all my pensions for three years. 

King James did indeed at my return (which was with the loss of 
above 1300 pistoles, as may appear by the French king’s answer to 
my last petition marked D) take oft the stop off my pension, and 
ordered the payment of the arrears, but permitted the lord treasurer 
Rochester to cutt off above 1300/. to pay the workmen for the en- 


APPENDIX. 121 


gin that serves Windsor Castle with water upon the account of 
some boons, and some reimbursments I had gott of King Charles in 
about a year and a half’s time before my going over into France. 
And one of the boons was 150/. which payd for the jewel hee gave 
mee for pleasing him with the engine, and in remembrance of old 
services, which jewel I was forced to pawn and part with at Paris to 
furnish myself with money to bring mee back to England. 

As an addition to all these misfortunes, having charitably redeemed 
a certain woman (whose moralls I then knew not at all) from perish- 
ing in a prison, was inhumanely betrayed by her, under a pretence 
of gratitude, into a vain expectation of marrying an heiress of 20 
thousand pound. And swallowing too greedily the gilded bait, it 
proved my utter ruin. 

I know it is objected against mee, that I have been extravagant 
in expences with several wines. And I must confess, that was the 
only content I had in the world, all other things proving cross and 
full of trouble and bitterness. Besides that, I never frequented either 
tavern, or kept in pension women of pleasure. And what money 
ever came to my hands, excepting about 6 or 700/. per annum, in 
my family or relating therein, went amongst workmen of all sorts, 
for engins and chargeable experiments to please and divert His Ma- 
jesty; or else for secret service, which were often very considerable 
sums. Somewhat may bee judg’d by the paper (E). I am sure | 
have now hardly left ten shillings in the world. 

After all I would fain retire and spend my life in a Christian so- 
litude, and heartily beg you to lend me your helping hand, to have 
my condition truly represented to His Majesty, whereby you will 
highly and for ever oblige 

Your most affectionate, humble and faithfull servant, 
S. Mortanp, 

May 3rd. 1689. 


P.S. There is one thing that I omitted in the abbreviat of my 
own history, which is, that when I did engage to serve the late 
King Charles 2nd, and did reveal some conspiracy against his life, yet 
at the same time I plainly sent him word that it was upon con- 
dition, that I might never be call’d to bear witness against any of the 
conspirators, if upon his restauration, they should happen to bee ar- 
raigned at the barr of justice. And when Sir H. Vane was ordered 
to bee brought to his tryall, the Attorney-Generall did indeed send 
for mee, and did very much press mee in privat (and that in the 
King’s name) that I would appear as a witness against him, foras- 
much as His Majesty had been informed that I was privy to many 
transactions, where the said Sir Henry Vane was principally con- 
cerned, that would by the law of England bee adjudged high treason. 
But my answer to him was this, that I hoped His Majesty would 
remember his promise, that not a hair of their heads should ever 
be toucht upon any account. Besides that I would rather be prest to 
death than come in judgment against either him or any other, whose 
designs I had formerly discovered. And thereupon went home to 


122 APPENDIX. 


my house, and burnt a certain sheet of paper all written with Sir 
H. Vane’s own hand (which was a draught of a model of a new 
government with severe reflections on monarchy), as also several 
other papers, which would have been great evidence against him. 


Extract from another letter of Sir Samuel Morland to Archbishop 
Tenison, dated July 20th, 1688. 


...... In the interim I began to consider that perhaps I might 
do the public some kind of service, during this my retired life, by 
explayning ina new manner and method, the first six books of 
Euclid, and reducing them to common use and practice, and making 
all things plain and easy to the meanest capacity ; which is a thing 
that in my opinion would bee of excellent and singular use, as 
well for all publick schools as for all young students in the uni- 
versities; but as yet has not been performed to purpose by any 
author that I have seen whatever. 


The following paper is taken from the same manuscript. 


The proposalls Sir Samuel Morland gave unto Major Wildman for 
the King’s secret service were as followes. 

1. To open any letter though written and seald up with all the 
care and nicety that is practicable; and having coppied out the 
contents, to seal the same up again, with as many as shall be 
desired ; provided he have the same paper, wax and ink, that the 
party that wrot and seald it shall be so far from discerning his 
letter to be opend or disfigured, that he shall not know his own 
letter from the other counterfeits. 

2. To wash a written paper as white as before it was written. 

3. To counterfeit all handwriting so dexterously, that, upon oc- 
casion of state, the king may send the coppies and keep the ori- 
ginalls of any letters, dispatches or other papers, till any designes 
be ripe for conviction. 

4. To coppy any number of whole sheets of paper close written 
on both sides in as many minutes time, with this advantage, that it 
will be impossible for the coppies to be erronious (a). 


Ill. A Magnetical Problem by Thomas Lydyat, from the Bodleian 
MS. No. 313. ~ 


First, —Considering the declination of the needle touched with the 


(a) This document has been copied “ in a minute ” on the paper immediately 
following it, and can be distinctly read by holding it to the light. Next follows 
“An old writing pale, and almost worn out, copyed in a minute from both sides,” 
which is, however, rather indistinct. 


» 
‘ 4% 


Rep betibec siar inert: 


— 


APPENDIX. 123 


magnes or loadstone, from the plain of the horizon, for shewing of 
latitudes, I demand whether the loadstone, as it lyeth in its natural 
place and mine in the earth, hath not the two points of north and 
south directly respecting the north and south poles of the earth. If 
_ so, then, whether a straight steel wire, hung by the middles with a 
small thread in equal balance, and touched on either end with the 
north or south point of the stone, will not likewise directly respect 
the nurth and south pales. I say, touched hard with the very end of 
the wire : not as the usual manner is, drawn or pressed with the north 
or south end of the stone, along from the middle to the end of the 
ae which, as it may seem, makes the needle decline more than 
ue. 

Secondly,—Considering thevariation of the magnetical needle from 
the plain of the meridian for shewing of longitudes, I demand whether 
the same magnes or loadstone, lying in his natural place and mine 
in the earth, hath not as those two principal points directly respect- 
ing the north and south poles of the earth, so also every other two 
opposite points of itself in the like natural force (although not in the 
same degree of force) respecting those points of the earth whereunto 
it hath like situation. So that, for example, to speak only of three 
other being the chiefest, a wire touched in manner aforesaid, with the 
vertical or opposite, that is to say, uppermost or nethermost point of 
the stone lying in or newly taken out of his mine, by his free motion, 
will, in the same horizon, turn that end directly up or down-right, 
and take wholly to itself the situation and place of so much of the 
axis of that horizon: and, moreover, there being a line drawn round 
about the stone, equidistant from his poles of north and south, a wire 
touched in that point thereof that in the stone’s natural situation re- 
specteth the east or west, will likewise turn itself and lie level in the 
plain of the same horizon directly east and west: and finally, a wire 
likewise touched at a quarter of the said circle’s distance, will duly 
assume to itself that situation and place where the plains of the 
meridian of the same horizon and equinoctial meet with and cross 
and cut each other. I say still, the same horizon : because loadstones 
of divers countries must consequently have and shew divers horizons 
and meridians with points correspondent; there being no natural 
horizon or meridian, or east and west, in the world, as there is wqui- 
noctial, and north and south. 

This have I conceived in my mind many years since, upon com- 
paring of our countryman Norman his New Attractive, concerning 
the declination of the magnetical needle by himself first observed, 
and variation of the same, with Baptista Porta his book de miradili- 
bus magnetis ; but hitherto partly I have not had fit opportunity to 
make trial thereof, and partly I have neglected it, by reason I 
found it flatly contradicted by D. Gilbert in divers places of his books 
de magnete, and also by some of my learned friends; who, being 
asked by me, whether a needle touched in any other place of the 
loadstone besides the poles, would respect the poles in like manner 
as if it were touched in either pole, answered that it would in like 
manner, tho’ not in like force, but by so much the weaklier by 


124 APPENDIX. 


how much it was touched the farther from the poles; and that being 
touched in the circle drawn equidistant from the poles, answering 
the zquinoctial of the world, it would have no respect at all. All 
which notwithstanding, many times musing with myself and think- 
ing on-it, and finding as yet no other sufficient reason of the decli- 
nation and variation both, I suppose it possible and likely that 
the loadstone generally and totally both may have such a respective 
force in it, as I have said, lying in his natural mine or newly taken 
out of it; and also may retain the same, and impart it forcibly enough, 
a goodwhile after: if so be it be laid and kept still in the like situ- 
ation. But the cause why few loadstoues of many, do retain the same, 
[which made Severtius, in his first book Orbis Catoptrici, think there 
were divers kinds of them, some, whereof hereports himself and others 
to have made sufficient trial, having more points of respect (namely, 
east and west) than others, ] may be for that, for the most part with- 
out regard they are laid, or else by reason of their shape they fall and 
lie long in a diverse or contrary situation from that which was their 
natural ; now, that side upward which was downward, now that side 
eastward which was westward, now that side northward which was 
southward; whereby it comes to pass that within awhile, as they are 
much impaired in their two principal respective points of north and 
south, so they become, as it were, giddy and mopish, suai at length 
almost quite defective in the other. 

Now, if this prove true, I dare avouch, that thereby is given a most 
certain and ready means of measuring the longitudes, or east and 
west distances; and withal a most easy way of sailing by a great 
circle, that is to say, the shortest cut, toward what position or situ- 
ation soever ; the vertical touch for the most part being fittest for 
this use, and an equinoctial for the other; whereas the polar touch 
can demonstrate only the latitudes, although them of all other the 
most firmly. But touching these corollaries there needs not any 
further discourse, until experimental proof be made of the former 
problem. 

Th. L. 


THE END. 


Printed by Richard and John E. Taylor, Red Lion Court, Fleet Street. 


j 
. 
' 
*. 
a. 
i 
.? 
‘4 
} 
3 
A 


Binning sécTtT. JUL15 We 


PLEASE DO NOT REMOVE 
CARDS OR SLIPS FROM THIS POCKET 


UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO LIBRARY 


Q Halliwell-Phillipps, James 
127 Orchard 
G4HHA A collection of letters 


illustrative of the progress 
of science in England 


P&AScCi 


34 


ft 
mers 


guile in inte ee Teed 
+ if aie sid rete 
a aera 


Be y fe righty! ae . 
y 


' bale 


ad ty. 
AP ay 
vlctdates rt ‘ * 
f 
Lanett 
Hater viel 
aka 


vi ven ie 
ef ae 


Me fy 
wiyek ‘ 


i te ity et Peake 
ira Lea ca WIR debe wneud eri ess 
ieee eae aed eee : ay Hie 
pte apet Mase 4 ve 4 
Ai ied tte Hb) haste ghey j 
oh vee yy isaaenF. pete ep ode 
3 Tenant aheoh 


a 
ies 


ard 
Fee Re oe 
ete 


¥ 
’ teh ae 
fF Ree : . ue fi we ¥ 
aay > grea eae Hkesas OS EE a 
sree et hig ath ‘ ead , sap y 
+ 


Fab egy 3 i thee ue 

Payne Paw ticid “ph ie pints i at thy 
Fria eae ks serbia ete # oe pa ee nba 
Wave HE eral fie Pradlry 
‘ 


bites ats He drchae PH 
Bs Hives Peery ok 
cepa rhatet baa nts ae 
bh eae TRA ER HTH, 
Ms $f petit reseed ores 


ae) we 
reer ial a 
M4 spat pi eet ip dee 


(arte esr se pee 
bith 8 Pai 


ii ot 
Hines Sols 


hahsd 

pd SB al : 
badd ey Che ane + peel 4 ene 
pada az ire Spharab A pha rat barley etn tas fy re ge 
ye Sy) i tocaneMdtohapa Depianeein peed ite ie ee 
Dig hepa at pd va he 

Ope. nie 

i 


wyiyne out? at 
aie RT oth yet 


ee 


by BATH ayeob 
vy as Poscatenees mattis attrid Cush ib nae 
Sesion be Paset VAT Rom bh bas 6 
a Fas wth Vis. oto ned 
PZ alapors i be as 
Ves ¥ Nas We abi eo be 
f wre bok be 4 : 
Ai okt WF be St Pa Bey BRP EARNERS h Sotha shor pl eaw Tras . 
tet i> ALPE Bate sibats Parise eh abe y Ui Eb 0 i ytese sae a Gari! ielilsig 
mire HE Setab heath) wie : Seek PS DPB bE SD Prosbiy che 
Soom a - ; 4y8 
= +4 “ah eon: 


ywke ARO 


whe 


se denit are 
a PART A) Re 
ay HUME yon Sb Prete ot FUPY 
Gebsbune eokarw 
ot FR: Aes Abby Fe) 
RSE, 


Were PAY a 
iste Poe SERED web v4 is63 aad 4 
wr HEPA ASUPEN ERTS Lab sy, fare wy 
basta t 


ie Avely 


Zyayed np 
Tr “ph ele 
Wursebe hh s 


Swe 
vy choaplachntinct 
Cone 
# Athol ee Mi riige 
es a i et) ry oe ha 
tuy,' » 


Leth cath wet ly 
ie Va dy 


pe LRG has hon St thea 7 
th aye hs AV 


Hs rah reas 
i mptase Sega 
ay ; 


ee 
: Perey? aifaad mavess 
‘ eee inet ye “#43 tobe wae as 
Ht; UE AAT LE 


Perey ly, 


whe 

BS Tages Haber rentieiey: vat sal 
A. SHEED 

ct isin at 


crt mas nt ia 
ine tee teh tt api 
Satie ie hal 7y eee ih 
: as arn ur 
rh alain te 


a ibves 
an 


Ne f 
4445 brea 


ea 
‘ Poi 


a 


get f ; 
sities yt tit oy kiting